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DNA
Links Aborigines To African Walkabout
05/08/07
New research confirms
theory that all modern humans are descended from the same small
group of people
Researchers have produced
new DNA evidence that almost certainly confirms the theory that
all modern humans have a common ancestry.
The genetic survey, produced by
a collaborative team led by scholars at Cambridge and Anglia
Ruskin Universities, shows that Australia's aboriginal population
sprang from the same tiny group of colonists, along with their
New Guinean neighbors.
The research confirms the “Out
Of Africa” hypothesis that all modern humans stem from a
single group of Homo sapiens who emigrated from Africa 2,000
generations ago and spread throughout Eurasia over thousands of
years. These settlers replaced other early humans (such as
Neanderthals), rather than interbreeding with them.
Academics analyzed the
mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and Y chromosome DNA of Aboriginal
Australians and Melanesians from New Guinea. This data was
compared with the various DNA patterns associated with early
humans. The research was an international effort, with
researchers from Tartu in Estonia, Oxford, and Stanford in
California all contributing key data and expertise.
The results showed that both
the Aborigines and Melanesians share the genetic features that
have been linked to the exodus of modern humans from Africa
50,000 years ago.
Until now, one of the main
reasons for doubting the “Out Of Africa” theory was
the existence of inconsistent evidence in Australia. The skeletal
and tool remains that have been found there are strikingly
different from those elsewhere on the “coastal expressway”
– the route through South Asia taken by the early settlers.
Some scholars argue that these
discrepancies exist either because the early colonists interbred
with the local Homo erectus population, or because there was a
subsequent, secondary migration from Africa. Both explanations
would undermine the theory of a single, common origin for
modern-day humans.
But in the latest research
there was no evidence of a genetic inheritance from Homo erectus,
indicating that the settlers did not mix and that these people
therefore share the same direct ancestry as the other Eurasian
peoples.
Geneticist Dr Peter Forster,
who led the research, said: “Although it has been
speculated that the populations of Australia and New Guinea came
from the same ancestors, the fossil record differs so
significantly it has been difficult to prove. For the first time,
this evidence gives us a genetic link showing that the Australian
Aboriginal and New Guinean populations are descended directly
from the same specific group of people who emerged from the
African migration.”
At the time of the migration,
50,000 years ago, Australia and New Guinea were joined by a land
bridge and the region was also only separated from the main
Eurasian land mass by narrow straits such as Wallace's Line in
Indonesia. The land bridge was submerged about 8,000 years ago.
The new study also explains why
the fossil and archaeological record in Australia is so different
to that found elsewhere even though the genetic record shows no
evidence of interbreeding with Homo erectus, and indicates a
single Palaeolithic colonization event.
The DNA patterns of the
Australian and Melanesian populations show that the population
evolved in relative isolation. The two groups also share certain
genetic characteristics that are not found beyond Melanesia. This
would suggest that there was very little gene flow into Australia
after the original migration.
Dr Toomas Kivisild, from the
Cambridge University Department of Biological Anthropology, who
co-authored the report, said: “The evidence points to
relative isolation after the initial arrival, which would mean
any significant developments in skeletal form and tool use were
not influenced by outside sources.
“There was probably a
minor secondary gene flow into Australia while the land bridge
from New Guinea was still open, but once it was submerged the
population was apparently isolated for thousands of years. The
differences in the archaeological record are probably the result
of this, rather than any secondary migration or interbreeding.”
The study is reported in the
new issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
More Information:
Homo sapiens originated in
Africa 150,000 years ago and began to migrate 55,000 to 60,000
years ago. It is thought he arrived in Australia around 45,000
years before present (BP). Australia was, at the time, already
colonized by homo erectus. The eastern migration route towards
Australia is referred to as the “coastal express”
route, due to the comparatively rapid progress made by those who
used it. This dispersal, from Africa to Australia through
Arabia, Asia and the Malay peninsula, could have occurred at a
rate of 1km per year.
Australia's archaeological
record provides several apparent inconsistencies with the “Out
Of Africa” theory. In particular, the earliest known
Australian skeletons, from Lake Mungo, are relatively slender
and gracile in form, whereas younger skeletal finds are much
more robust. This robustness, which remains, for example, in the
brow ridge structure of modern Aborigines, would suggest either
interbreeding between homo sapiens and homo erectus or multiple
migrations into Australia, followed by interbreeding. The
archaeological data also indicates an intensification of the
density and complexity of different stone tools in Australia
during the Holocene period (beginning around 10,000 years BP),
in particular the emergence of backed-blade stone technology.
The first dingos arrived at around the same time, and it is
thought both were brought to the continent by new human arrivals
– leading to theories of a secondary migration that has
resulted in disputes regarding the single point of origin
theory.
Source:
University of Cambridge

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