Post by UKarchaeology on Aug 10, 2015 13:20:19 GMT
For decades, scientists have constructed competing hypothetical models explaining how and when anatomically modern humans (AMH), or early modern humans, left their original homelands in Africa to colonize and populate the globe. Not to be confused with the models that suggest the far earlier movement out of Africa by the hominids known as Homo erectus—a more ancient human species—the AMH's are thought to have dispersed out of Africa around 60,000 years ago, according to one broadly accepted theory.
Now, a team of scientists, led by Hugo Reyes-Centeno of Eberhard Karls Universität and colleagues, have tested the spatial and temporal aspects of hypothetical dispersal routes by analyzing the early modern human fossil record from Africa and the Levant, including a large dataset of human crania from Asia, to model ancestor-descendant relationships. The results of their analysis, they conclude, have significant implications for developing a deeper understanding of the complexity of modern human origins and diversity.
"By assessing the correlation of geographical distances between populations and measures of population differentiation derived from quantitative cranial phenotype data," stated the researchers in their report, "our results support a model in which extant Australo-Melanesians are descendants of an initial dispersal out of Africa by early anatomically modern humans, while all other populations are descendants of a later migration wave."*
The study results support models that suggest the possibility that anatomically modern humans reached Australia, for example, by about 40 - 50,000 years ago. The scientific debate, however, rages on, and future studies will likely shed additional light on the developing AMH dispersal story.
(pics/source: popular-archaeology.com/issue/summer-2015/article/australo-melanesians-and-a-very-ancient-ancestry )
Now, a team of scientists, led by Hugo Reyes-Centeno of Eberhard Karls Universität and colleagues, have tested the spatial and temporal aspects of hypothetical dispersal routes by analyzing the early modern human fossil record from Africa and the Levant, including a large dataset of human crania from Asia, to model ancestor-descendant relationships. The results of their analysis, they conclude, have significant implications for developing a deeper understanding of the complexity of modern human origins and diversity.
"By assessing the correlation of geographical distances between populations and measures of population differentiation derived from quantitative cranial phenotype data," stated the researchers in their report, "our results support a model in which extant Australo-Melanesians are descendants of an initial dispersal out of Africa by early anatomically modern humans, while all other populations are descendants of a later migration wave."*
The study results support models that suggest the possibility that anatomically modern humans reached Australia, for example, by about 40 - 50,000 years ago. The scientific debate, however, rages on, and future studies will likely shed additional light on the developing AMH dispersal story.
(pics/source: popular-archaeology.com/issue/summer-2015/article/australo-melanesians-and-a-very-ancient-ancestry )