View Full Version : Early humans 'followed coast'


Knight-Dragon
May 17, 2005, 11:47 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4543767.stm

The first humans who left Africa to populate the world headed south along the coast of the Indian Ocean, Science magazine reports.

Scientists had always thought the exodus from Africa around 70,000 years ago took place along a northern route into Europe and Asia.

But according to a genetic study, early modern humans followed the beach, possibly lured by a seafood diet.

They quickly reached Australia but took much longer to settle in Europe.

Dr Martin Richards, of the University of Leeds, UK, who took part in the study, says the first humans may have moved south in search of better fishing grounds when stocks in the Red Sea dwindled due to climate change.

"That might have been the push that set them off," he told the BBC News website.

DNA clues

It is thought that when the first modern humans evolved in Africa, they lived mainly on meat hunted from animals. But by 70,000 years ago, they had switched to a marine diet, largely shellfish.

The new research suggests they moved along the coasts of the Arabian peninsula into India, Indonesia and Australia about 65,000 years ago. An offshoot later led to the settlement of the Middle East and Asia about 30 to 40,000 years ago.

The data comes from studies by two teams of scientists on the DNA of native people living in Malaysia and on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands between India and Burma.

Scientists can estimate how closely related we are by studying the DNA of the energy producing parts of the cell, our mitochondria.

antonio
May 18, 2005, 10:24 AM
I thought that that was qiute well known I'd known that for ages.

Volstag
May 18, 2005, 01:02 PM
I just watched a NOVA program lastnight concerning pre-Clovis migrations into the Americas. The most stunning revelation was the presence of mitochondrial DNA, in the Ojibwa tribe, that can only be traced back to Europe -- specifically southern France & northern Spain. Not only that, but France also contains the first known examples of Clovis style spearheads (which were widely used in the stoneage Americas). The theory: Europeans travelled to the Americas as far back as ~18,000 BCE.

More information can be obtained here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stoneage/about.html

Fascinating stuff.

bloodofages
May 18, 2005, 05:26 PM
I think we did not start in Africa i think man did start in diffreant places in this world.

Zardnaar
May 18, 2005, 11:18 PM
I think we did not start in Africa i think man did start in diffreant places in this world.

I thinks theres to much evidence that points to Africa.[

Esckey
May 18, 2005, 11:28 PM
I just watched a NOVA program lastnight concerning pre-Clovis migrations into the Americas. The most stunning revelation was the presence of mitochondrial DNA, in the Ojibwa tribe, that can only be traced back to Europe -- specifically southern France & northern Spain. Not only that, but France also contains the first known examples of Clovis style spearheads (which were widely used in the stoneage Americas). The theory: Europeans travelled to the Americas as far back as ~18,000 BCE.


I saw this too, It has to be the most interesting NOVA I've seen. The idea is almost revolutionary.

Volstag
May 19, 2005, 09:48 AM
I think we did not start in Africa i think man did start in diffreant places in this world.

Anything is possible, but it would take a series of very startling discoveries to go up against the preponderance of "Africa first" evidence.

Mungaf
May 21, 2005, 04:35 PM
Well yeah, that's why there are all those little Negrito populations in South Asia linking the peoples of Oceania to Africa.

Speaking of that, is there any further word on those Australoid bones discovered in Tierra del Fuego? What was up with that?

Fox Mccloud
May 25, 2005, 06:40 PM
I just watched a NOVA program lastnight concerning pre-Clovis migrations into the Americas. The most stunning revelation was the presence of mitochondrial DNA, in the Ojibwa tribe, that can only be traced back to Europe -- specifically southern France & northern Spain. Not only that, but France also contains the first known examples of Clovis style spearheads (which were widely used in the stoneage Americas). The theory: Europeans travelled to the Americas as far back as ~18,000 BCE.

More information can be obtained here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stoneage/about.html

Fascinating stuff.

I find it strange how early humans made it to all parts of the world, but America wasn't discovered by most europeans until Columbus....

kittenOFchaos
May 26, 2005, 04:38 PM
I think we did not start in Africa i think man did start in diffreant places in this world.

Well, you can think that if you like, but getting proof for the simultaneous evolution of homo sapiens or close relations around different, geographically isolated locations is a theory that'd take alot of proving.

Not that it matters one iota.