Human genetic history

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The Y chromosome is one of the least reliable methods of tracing the history of early humans. Our ancestors originated in Africa, and eventually made their way out to the rest of the world. According to current scientific thinking, Africa was the cradle of humanity.

[edit] Into the 21st century: tracing the genetic history of humans

Thirteen genetic markers on the Y-chromosome differentiate populations of human beings. As humans migrated out of Africa, they all carried a genetic feature on the Y-chromosome known as M168.[1]

The first wave of migration out of Africa stayed close to the oceans shores, tracing a band along the coastal areas of the Indian Ocean including parts of the Arabian Peninsula, the Middle East, the Indian Subcontinent and into South East Asia, down into what is now Indonesia, and eventually reaching Australia. This branch of the human family developed a new marker, M130.

The second wave of migration took a more northerly course, splitting somewhere in the area around what we now call Syria to sweep to the northwest into the area we know as Yugoslavia, and to the east, where it split several more times in Central Asia, north of Afghanistan. The current that flowed into southern Europe east of Italy is characteristed by M174, and the current that flowed into Central Asia carries M9. The other nine markers were added after the migration paths went on in several different directions from Central Asia.

The first wave of migration appears to have left dark-skinned peoples along its path, including isolated groups of dark-skinned people in south east Asia such as the aboriginal population of the Andaman Islands (around 400 km off the west coast of Thailand), the Semang of Malaysia, and the Aeta of the Philippines. [2]

The African diasphora is believed to have begun some 50,000 years ago, long enough for many changes to have occurred in Africa since that time. The genetic picture reported above concerns the humans who did not remain in Africa and their genetic histories. The diversity that is found outside of Africa may well have been accentuated since the populations that were migrating always to new hunting grounds would rarely have had individuals moving backwards into more settled regions. But within Africa isolation would have been geographically aided primarily by the Sahara Desert, leaving the people in areas not separated by the desert to travel and migrate relatively freely.

It is believed, on the basis of genetic evidence, that all humans in existence up to 60,000 years ago lived in Africa.[3] The earliest groups of humans are believed to find their present-day descendants among the San people, a group that is now found in western southern Africa. Skeletal remains of an ancestral people are found in Paleolithic sites in Somalia and Ethiopia. There are also peoples in east Africa today who speak substantially different languages that nevertheless share the archaic characteristics of the San language, its distinctive repretoire of click and pop sounds. These are the only languages in the entire world that use these sounds in speech. Southern and eastern Africa are believed to originally have been populated by people akin to the San. Since that early time much of their range has been taken over by the Bantu

The San are smaller than the Bantu. They have lighter skins, more tightly curled hair, and they share the epicanthic fold with the people of east Asia, such as the Chinese and Japanese.

Female Karo in Ethiopia
Female Karo in Ethiopia
San rock painting
San rock painting


[edit] Sources

  1. ^ Spencer Wells, The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey, p. 182f. Random House, ISBN 0-8129-7146-9
  2. ^ Spencer Wells, The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey, p. 75. Random House, ISBN 0-8129-7146-9
  3. ^ Spencer Wells, The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey, p. 55. Random House, ISBN 0-8129-7146-9

[edit] Genetic proximity of various populations on the African continent

Pygmoid
Bantu, north east
Bantu, central east
Bantu, south west
Bantu, central west
Nilotic
Kunama
Bantu, south east
Bantu, north west
Ubangian
Volta
Ewe
Gur
Mande
Kru
Yoruba
Ibo
Fulani
Hausa
Bane
Bedik
Funji
Biaka
Sara
Serer
Wolof
Peul
Sandawe
Hadza
San
Somali
Khoi
Mbuti
Algerian
Beja
Tuareg
Sudanese
Cushitic
Tigray
Baria
Amhara
Nubian
Moroccan
Bedouin
Tunisian
Libyan
Canarian
Egyptian
Berber
(Source:[citation needed])