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Author Topic: Modern Human linked to Single Band out of Africa  (Read 9151 times)
three_sixty
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« on: May 14, 2005, 03:30:15 PM »

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/12/science/12cnd-migrate.html

Geneticists Link Modern Humans to Single Band Out of Africa

A team of geneticists believe they have shed light on many aspects of how modern humans emigrated from Africa by analyzing the DNA of the Orang Asli, the original inhabitants of Malaysia. Because the Orang Asli appear to be directly descended from the first emigrants from Africa, they have provided valuable new clues about that momentous event in early human history.

The geneticists conclude that there was only one migration of modern humans out of Africa - that it took a southern route to India, Southeast Asia and Australasia, and consisted of a single band of hunter-gatherers, probably just a few hundred people strong.

A further inference is that because these events took place during the last Ice Age, Europe was at first too cold for human habitation and was populated only later - not directly from Africa but as an offshoot of the southern migration which trekked back through the lands that are now India and Iran to reach the Near East and Europe.

The findings depend on analysis of mitochondrial DNA, a type of genetic material inherited only through the female line. They are reported in today's issue of Science by a team of geneticists led by Vincent Macaulay of the University of Glasgow.

Everyone in the world can be placed on a single family tree, in terms of their mitochondrial DNA, because everyone has inherited that piece of DNA from a single female, the mitochondrial Eve, who lived some 200,000 years ago. There were, of course, many other women in that ancient population, but over the generations one mitochondrial DNA replaced all the others through the process known as genetic drift. With the help of mutations that have built up on the one surviving copy, geneticists can arrange people in lineages and estimate the time of origin of each lineage.

With this approach, Dr. Macaulay's team calculates that the emigration from Africa took place about 65,000 years ago, pushed along the coastlines of India and Southeast Asia, and reached Australia by 50,000 years ago, the date of the earliest known archaeological site.

The Orang Asli - meaning "original men" in Malay - are probably one of the surviving populations descended from this first migration, since they have several ancient mitochondrial DNA lineages that are found nowhere else. These lineages are between 42,000 and 63,000 years old, the geneticists say.

Groups of Orang Asli like the Semang have probably been able to remain intact because they are adapted to the harsh life of living in forests, said Dr. Stephen Oppenheimer, the member of the geneticists' team who collected blood samples in Malaysia.

Some archaeologists believe that Europe was colonized by a second migration, which traveled north out of Africa. This fits with the earliest known modern human sites - which date to 45,000 years ago in the Levant and 40,000 years ago in Europe.

But Dr. Macaulay's team says there could only have been one migration, not two, because the mitochondrial lineages of everyone outside Africa converge at the same time to the same common ancestors. Therefore, people from the southern migration, probably in India, must have struck inland to reach the Levant, and later Europe, the geneticists say.

Dr. Macaulay said it was not clear why only one group had succeeded in leaving Africa. One possibility is that since the migration occurred by one population budding into another, leaving people in place at each site, the first emigrants may have blocked others from leaving.

Another possibility is that the terrain was so difficult for hunter-gatherers, who must carry all their belongings with them, that only one group succeeded in the exodus.

Although there is general, but not complete, agreement that modern humans emigrated from Africa in recent times, there is still a difference between geneticists and archaeologists as to the timing of this event. Archaeologists tend to view the genetic data as providing invaluable information about the interrelationship between groups of people, but they place less confidence in the dates derived from genetic family trees.

There is no evidence of modern humans outside Africa earlier than 50,000 years ago, says Dr. Richard Klein, an archaeologist at Stanford University. Also, if something happened 65,000 years ago to allow people to leave Africa, as Dr. Macaulay's team suggests, there should surely be some record of this event in the archaeological record within Africa, Dr. Klein said. Yet signs of modern human behavior do not appear in Africa until the transition between the Middle and Later Stone Age, 50,000 years ago, he said.

"If they want to push such an idea, find me a 65,000-year-old site with evidence of human occupation outside of Africa," Dr. Klein said.

Geneticists counter that many of the coastline sites occupied by the first emigrants would now lie under water, since sea level has risen more than 200 feet since the last Ice Age. Dr. Klein expressed reservations about this argument, noting that rather than waiting for the rising sea levels to overwhelm them, people would build new sites further inland.

Dr. Macaulay said that genetic dates have improved in recent years now that it is affordable to decode the whole ring of mitochondrial DNA, not just a small segment as before. But he said he agreed "that archaeological dates are much firmer than the genetic ones" and that it is possible his 65,000-year date for the African exodus is too old.

Dr. Macaulay's team has been able to estimate the size of the population in Africa from which the founders are descended. The calculation indicates a maximum of 550 women, but the true size may have been considerably less. This points to a single group of hunter-gatherers, perhaps a couple of hundred strong, as the ancestors of all humans outside of Africa, Dr. Macaulay said.
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« Reply #1 on: May 14, 2005, 03:32:26 PM »

http://www.independent-media.tv/item.cfm?fmedia_id=10261&fcategory_desc=Issues%20Related%20to%20Indigenous%20People

Tsunami: Andaman Tribes Have Lessons to Teach Survivors

January 06, 2005

By: Ranjit Devraj
Inter Press Service News Agency


Material by:
Ranjit Devraj


NEW DELHI, Jan 6 (IPS) - Stone age tribes living on India's remote Andaman and Nicobar islands not only survived the devastating Dec. 26 tsunami -- triggered by an undersea quake whose epicenter was closest to their homelands -- but may actually have a few lessons in reading natural early warning systems for their less perceptive Asian neighbours, say scientists.

While close to 150,000 people have been confirmed dead on the coasts of a dozen countries around the Bay of Bengal after being caught unaware by giant killer waves, the Onges, Jarawas, Sentinalese, and Great Andamanese, who live in the archipelago escaped unscathed because they took to the forests and higher ground well in time.

''These tribes live close to nature and are known to heed biological warning signs like changes in the cries of birds and the behaviour patterns of land and marine animals,'' V. Raghavendra Rao, Director of the Kolkatta-based Anthropological Survey of India (ASI) told IPS in a phone interrview.

Based on reports from his field staff on the badly devastated archipelago of 550 islands, strung out between Burma's main port of Rangoon and Indonesia's Sumatra island, Rao confirmed to IPS that there were no known casualties among the five tribes -- although there are unconfirmed reports of a few missing Onges.

The Andaman and Nicobar islands have a population of around 500,000 people of which the tribals form less than 30,000. Of the tribals, the biggest group is the Nicobarese at around 20,000.

Rao and other ASI experts believe that the tribes may hold the key to building a resource base for a reliable and cost-effective coastal warning system against future catastrophes.

Experts around the world have blamed the unusually high human toll from the tsunami, which was spawned by a huge undersea quake in the northern tip of Sumatra island, on the absence of a reliable early warning system such as the sophisticated Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre based in Honolulu, Hawaii.

But top Indian scientists think that such a system may not be practical for the countries of the Indian Ocean where tsunamis are extremely rare.

''Building up a tsunami prediction network for the Indian Ocean will be a gigantic effort - after all we cannot build shelters against 25-foot (7.62 meters) high waves to cover hundreds of kilometers of coastline,'' said S.Z. Qasim, India's best-known oceanographer and vice-chairman of the Society for Indian Ocean Studies.

''As soon as things settle down we are planning to document the vast and valuable indigenous, intangible knowledge and survival skills that exist on the islands -- not only on impending catastrophes but also on herbs and medicinal plants,'' Rao, one of the few Indian officials authorised to speak on the subject said.

''Immediate documentation is important because we also need to record how the tribes that live by hunting and foraging adapt to the major geomorphological changes wrought to their habitat on the islands by the Dec. 26 events,'' he added.

These tribes have origins reaching into Mesolithic and Upper Paleolithic era (between 20,000 and 60,000 years old) and efforts at scientifically studying their unique genetic characteristic have been made in collaboration with the Hyderabad-based Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB).

DNA studies carried out by the CCMB have shown the Onges who inhabit reservations on Dugong Creek and the South Bay of Little Andaman Island to be the most primitive of the tribes and closely related to African pygmies. That also makes them the most endangered, with fewer than a 100 individuals now known to exist, partly as a result of catching diseases like hepatitis from contact with outsiders that began under British colonial rule in 1886.

Another Negrito group, the Jarawas on Great Andaman island suffered not only as result of diseases introduced by outsiders but also because of punitive expeditions carried out by the British and the Japanese who occupied the islands and built bunkers and fortifications on them during World War II.

Since the construction of the Andaman Truck road connecting the administrative centre of Port Blair with Diglipur, on Great Andaman, the Jarawas have been increasingly coming into contact with Indian settlers who originally came to build the road but then stayed on as encroachers.

The Sentinalese, who are believed to be originally an offshoot of the Onges live on North Sentinel island west of South Andaman and are probably the last of the world's Paleolithic people that have no contact with the rest of the world because the island is completely out of bounds to outsiders.

Scientists believe that because of the extreme isolation of the Sentinalese, this tribe has become biomedically valuable. They warn that these tribespeople, in the future, could be targeted by bio-prospectors for valuable genetic traits that may have long ago vanished in other ethnic or racial groups.

Confirmation of their safety came from the Indian coast guard which carried out surveys over the 60 square kilometer Sentinel island last week on low-flying helicopters which were greeted with arrows and spears by the hostile Sentinalese.

The director general of the coast guard, Vice-Admiral A.K. Singh, said on Monday that he was relieved to see the hostility because it was sure sign that the Sentinalese were fighting fit and not interested in receiving outside help following the tsunami. He had pictures of Sentinalese aiming arrows at his chopper to prove the point.

Apart from the four Negrito groups, the southern part of the archipelago (Nicobar group) is home to tribes of Mongoloid origin like the reclusive Shompens numbering 300 and the more sophisticated, Nicobarese who may have migrated from Indonesia's Sumatra island nearby.

Most of the tribal victims of the tsunami were Nicobarese and as many as a quarter of their population of 20,000 people, who are mostly coastal farmers and followers of the Christian faith, may have perished when the killer waves struck.

Following the Dec. 26 tsunami Indian authorities have refused permission for international volunteer agencies seeking to go beyond Port Blair to carry out relief work on the grounds that they do not want the aborigines to be disturbed in any way.

Besides the need to protect the aborigines, the Andaman and Nicobar islands bristles with defence installations and has since 2001 supported a joint-service command involving elements of the army, navy air force and coast guard under a single commander.





Original Link: http://ipsnews.net/new_nota.asp?idnews=26926
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« Reply #2 on: May 16, 2005, 12:02:22 AM »

First man’s children in Andamans
G.S. MUDUR
Reprinted from The Telegraph/Calcutta

New Delhi, May 12: Two tribes in the Andamans may be the direct descendants of the earliest modern humans who trudged out of Africa over 70,000 years ago, scientists will announce tomorrow.

A study by Indian scientists has revealed the African origins of the Great Andamanese and the Onge tribes and may force researchers to revise current theories about prehistoric human migration.

The Great Andamanese and the Onge are both Negrito tribes and scientists have suspected that their roots lie in Africa. But previous studies had hinted that they are closer to Asians than to Africans.

Now, scientists at the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) in Hyderabad have reported that the two tribes have remained isolated on the islands for tens of thousands of years.

“Ancient genetic mutations in these tribes make them closer to Africans than any other populations in the world,” said Dr Lalji Singh, CCMB director.

Scientists believe that all people alive today are descendants of modern humans who migrated out of east Africa about 70,000 years ago to replace ‘early humans’ elsewhere.

The reigning theory is that modern humans first moved north along the Nile, across the Sinai peninsula, into central Asia before heading east towards India.

“But our findings suggest that they also traced a coastal route along east Africa and the Arabian peninsula into south Asia,” said Kumarasami Thangaraj, a senior scientist at the CCMB.

Thangaraj studied genetic mutations to construct a human family tree spanning 70,000 years with the migrants from Africa at the top, and their descendants branching off into populations across Asia. Mutations in genetic material called mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited only from mothers, can help scientists determine the proximity between different populations.

The CCMB analysed complete mitochondrial DNA sequences from five Great Andamanese, five Onges and five Nicobarese — and compared them with mutations in other populations.

The analysis revealed that the genetic branches M31 and M32 in the Great Andamanese and the Onges emerged directly from a “founder population” about 65,000 years ago. “And they have remained trapped there since then,” said Singh.

An independent investigation by British and Malaysian scientists has corroborated the CCMB findings. Both studies appear in Friday’s issue of the US journal Science.

Glasgow University’s Vincent Macaulay and his colleagues found that an aboriginal tribe named Orang Asli in Malaysia had branched off 60,000 years ago. Macaulay’s team also calculated that the 12,000-km trek along the coast from India to Australia was made at speeds between 0.7 km to 4 km per year.

Thangaraj said the move from coastal India to the islands may have been made on primitive boats fashioned out of tree trunks. The CCMB scientists have observed that even today, the Onges build boats from trees.

“We hope these findings inspire archaeological exploration between the Arabian peninsula and Southeast Asia in search of the remains of the first Eurasians,” Peter Forster, an anthropologist from Cambridge University, said.

The CCMB study has also thrown up a surprise.

Genetic analysis of 6,500 people on mainland India showed that no one had the M31 or M32 mutations. “If the tribes had moved from India, we would have expected to find the mutations in some people on the mainland, too,” said Thangaraj.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1050513/asp/frontpage/story_4733855.asp
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