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- Early
African Exodus to Asia
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- Scientists have discovered
the first solid evidence of an early African migration wave out
of Africa that aimed straight for India, Asia and Australia.
The clue to the 60,000-year-old migration is a natural "tag"
in the mitochondrial DNA of people in Ethiopia, India and eastern
Asia, say scientists whose work appears in an issue of the journal
Nature Genetics.
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- Mitochondria are the
powerhouses of our cells, and carry their own DNA which changes
at theoretically predictable rates and can be used to trace lineages
of not only the mitochondria, but also the people who carry them.
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- "What you have
is a pattern (of lineage) emerging," says anthropologist
Clark Howell from the University of California at Berkeley, "more
explicitly than was the case before."
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- Over the past several
years many researchers have concentrated on the problem of when
humans first left Africa and by what route. Fossil evidence suggests
that the first modern African migration route out of Africa extended
northward around what is now known as the eastern Mediterranean
and Greece more than 100,000 years ago.
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- But the mitochondrial
DNA study is the first evidence that Africans made their way
far beyond Africa and on to the rest of Asia, Australia and Pacific
islands. The emigrants would have probably traveled from then
present day Ethiopia region over a land bridge at the southern
end of the Red Sea and then up through Saudi Arabia.
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- From there, the emigrants
probably kept venturing east, staying south and away from the
very cold northern regions then already occupied by Neanderthals.
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- Such a southern emigration
route from Africa could explain how humans occupied Australia
so early, says one of the study's authors, Silvana Santachiara-Benerecetti
of the University of Pavia in Italy. "I think that the data
seem good," says Luca Cavalli-Sforza, a geneticist from
Stanford University.
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- There is a lot of similar
research being done and the full story of early Africa exoduses
will probably get clearer very soon as this work is confirmed
by other scientists, he said. These mitochondrial studies of
modern humans are separate from anthropological digs establishing
that extinct ancestors of humans inhabited Africa 4 million years
ago.
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- This report
is from December 2, 1999 and is also listed in the publication
journal Nature Genetics.
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- Give us your
thoughts and opinions!
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