DNA evidence has enriched our understanding of human history on Earth
February 23rd, 2010 - 2:28 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 23 (ANI): A collection of recent reviews has offered a timely update on how new genetic evidence, together with archaeological and linguistic evidence, has enriched our understanding of human history on earth.
“To understand what it is to be human, it is essential to understand the human past,” said Colin Renfrew of the University of Cambridge.
“Nearly all civilizations have their own origin or creation myth. Now we can use archaeogenetics to tell a global story that is robust and applicable to all human communities everywhere,” he added.
The journey started around 60 to 70 thousand years ago in Africa, where modern humans evolved more than 150 thousand years ago, and where human diversity is still the highest among all continents in terms of genetic variation and languages.
From there, humans settled Europe and South Asia and reached Oceania. The Americas (apart from the remote Oceanian islands) were settled last.
The course and the extent of these first migrations remains evident in the genetic makeup of humans living today, but later migrations and the cultural practices that people carried with them-farming in particular-have also left their legacy.
That legacy looks remarkably similar wherever farming spread, in Europe, Africa, and East Asia. Natural selection also left its mark.
A review by Jonathan Pritchard of the University of Chicago examines evidence for the genetic basis of human adaptations and the extent to which differences among human populations in characteristics such as lactose tolerance have been selected for over evolutionary time.
A review by Mark Stoneking and Frederick Delfin at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology tells of an early migration of modern humans from Africa along a southern route to East Asia.
In the case of the Americas, DNA evidence has confirmed the Asian origin of indigenous Americans and more precise estimates of when Native Americans emerged.
“Overall, the reviews show just how clear it has become that all of us trace our evolutionary roots to Africa,” Renfrew said. (ANI)
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Tags: asian origin, colin renfrew, creation myth, dna evidence, early migration, evolutionary time, genetic makeup, genetic variation, human adaptations, human diversity, human populations, indigenous americans, jonathan pritchard, linguistic evidence, mark stoneking, max planck, max planck institute, max planck institute for evolutionary anthropology, precise estimates, university of cambridge