New Study Pinpoints The Ancestral Homeland of All Humans Alive Today – ScienceAlert
Posted: October 30, 2019 at 7:48 am
A group of researchers say they have pinpointed the ancestral homeland of all humans alive today: modern-day Botswana.
In a new study published in the journal Nature, scientists analysed mitochondrial DNA genetic information that gets passed down the female line from more than 1,200 people across myriad populations in Africa.
By examining which genes were preserved in people's DNA over time, the anthropologists determined that anatomically modern humans emerged in what was once a lush wetland in Botswana, south of the Zambezi River.
Though scientists agree that modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) arose in Africa around 200,000 years ago, they have remained uncertain about exactly where on the continent that evolutionary milestone occurred.
The new study offers an answer to that question and also undermines the idea that our ancestors emerged in East Africa, as limited fossil evidence suggests.
The anthropologist Vanessa Hayes, the senior author of the new paper, said in a press conference that the findings suggested "everyone walking around today" could trace their mitochondrial DNA back to this "human homeland."
To trace the geographic origin of our ancestors, Hayes and her colleagues examined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from people living in southern Africa, such as the Khoisan.
mtDNA, which is passed down the maternal line, is often used to trace human ancestry because it isn't mixed with paternal DNA. That means it changes less over time and leaves a clearer link to distant relatives.
When it comes to mtDNA, modern humans all share a group of genes called the L macro-haplogroup.
This L-branch is split into two subgroups: L1-6 and L0. The latter can be found in the peoples of southern Africa, and that's what Hayes' team analysed. Eva Chan, a coauthor of the study, said this was the "by far the largest L0 study to date."
By pulling on that genetic string, the researchers were able to figure out that every person alive today descended from a woman who lived in modern-day Botswana about 200,000 years ago.
The region this ancestor came from, called the Makgadikgadi-Okavango paleo-wetland, was near the modern Okavango Delta and peppered with lakes and greenery.
The team's analysis, which also included reconstructions of what the area's climate was like at the time, revealed that Homo sapiens sapiens lived in this homeland for about 70,000 years.
Then, as the climate changed, our ancestors dispersed in two waves: First, a group spread northeast 130,000 years ago, then others left in a second migration to the southwest 110,000 years ago.
According to Hayes, these migrating groups likely followed herds of animals out of the region.
This timeline runs counter to the one some scientists have created based on fossil evidence, however.
The oldest-ever specimens of anatomically modern humans skulls and other fossils dating back 195,000 years were found in Ethiopia, which led many anthropologists to think of eastern Africa (rather than southern Africa, as the new study suggests) as the birthplace of our modern ancestors.
The new genetic analysis also offers credence to the idea that all modern humans evolved in one place in Africa before migrating to current-day Europe, Asia, and Australia what's known as the "Out of Africa" hypothesis rather than evolving separately in multiple places around the world at the same time.
According to the study authors, the two-wave migration out of Botswana "paved the way for modern humans to later migrate out of Africa, and ultimately across the world."
But the anthropologist Ryan Raaum, who researches African population genetics at Lehman College, thinks the new study has a significant flaw. According to Raaum, the researchers didn't go back far back enough on the genetic timeline.
Though Hayes' research pinpointed where the L0 haplogroup originated, he said, the mitochondrial DNA of most people in the world can be traced back to the L1-6 subgroup of the L-branch, not L0.
So to find a "single origin" for our species, Raaum said, researchers should find a genetic predecessor who lived before the genetic split between L0 and L1-6 occurred.
"Where I get a little lost in the weeds is when they expand out to argue that these data indicate a southern African origin for anatomically modern humans," he told Business Insider. "The data do not."
Raaum added that he didn't like the phrase "ancestral homeland" in general, since modern humans likely had multiple homelands scattered around the African continent.
"I increasingly think that there probably wasn't a single population in which modern humans evolved. If that is the case, there is no 'homeland'," he said.
Another issue with Hayes' team's findings is that an mtDNA analysis examines only maternal DNA.
Two parts of the cell carry DNA: the nucleus, where most of our genetic material resides, and the mitochondria.
Nuclear DNA (nDNA) is inherited from both parents and is what passes along the Y chromosome; mitochondrial DNA, on the other hand, is passed down from only the mother.
nDNA is rare in the fossil record, which is why studies like Hayes' often don't examine it. But that means such research can't examine the entire genome of our ancestral populations.
In 2014, anthropologists pinpointed the oldest known modern-human lineage based on Y chromosome data. This population was at most 160,000 years old and in central western Africa.
So every person alive today likely descended from a man who lived in a different part of the continent than the homeland Hayes and her colleagues suggest.
Hayes noted that a full genome analysis could yield different results: "There could be other origins and other lineages it's a possibility," she said during the press conference.
But whether or not Botswana was the cradle of life for everyone alive today, the new research certainly suggests this part of Africa was an oasis for our ancestors a significant addition to our understanding of human evolution.
"People want know where they came from," Hayes said.
This article was originally published by Business Insider.
More from Business Insider:
See the original post here:
New Study Pinpoints The Ancestral Homeland of All Humans Alive Today - ScienceAlert
- What is choline? Benefits, deficiency, and sources - Medical News Today - November 28th, 2019
- Nursing professor conducts research on breast cancer mortality rates - GW Hatchet - November 28th, 2019
- Family Members, Ranked - The Root - November 28th, 2019
- Scientists use animals and technology to rediscover eight extinct species | NOVA - NOVA Next - November 28th, 2019
- The Real-World Science That Underlies Pokmon Evolution (and Thunder Stones) - The Escapist - November 28th, 2019
- Mary Cain Still Calling on Nike to Hold Third-Party Probe Into Disbanded Oregon Project - WWD - November 28th, 2019
- 10 CrossFit Women Who Inspired Us In 2019 - BarBend - November 28th, 2019
- Do you hate vegetables? It could be in your DNA - WTSP.com - November 17th, 2019
- UNC Biology Researcher Honored With National Women in Science Fellowship - INDY Week - November 17th, 2019
- Scientists reveal why we feel so tired in the morning - Yahoo Lifestyle - November 17th, 2019
- Introducing the Targeted Anticancer Therapies and Precision Medicine in Cancer Collection - PLoS Blogs - November 17th, 2019
- Modern genetics will improve health and usher in designer children - The Economist - November 11th, 2019
- Female Hair Loss And What To Do About It - Explosion - November 11th, 2019
- New Analysis Shows Icosapent Ethyl (Vascepa) Is Cost Effective and Offers Rare Finding of Better Outcomes at Lower Healthcare Costs When Used to Treat... - November 11th, 2019
- REDUCE-IT USA Results, in Prespecified Subgroup Analyses of Landmark REDUCE-IT Global Study, Showed Robust Cardiovascular Risk Reductions Across a... - November 11th, 2019
- Eureka! Greatest Scientists who Changed the World review: Recreating great discoveries - The Hindu - November 2nd, 2019
- What is the Average Height of a 10 Year Old? - Modern Ghana - November 2nd, 2019
- Brain Cell Imbalance May Lead To Anxiety, OCD: Study - International Business Times - November 2nd, 2019
- The woman who reshaped maths - BBC News - November 1st, 2019
- Weird butterfly genetics counter popular theory of evolution - Inverse - November 1st, 2019
- Anne Le Troter's Sound Installation Stirs Up the Politics of Language - D Magazine - November 1st, 2019
- Basser Center takes aim at BRCA - Penn: Office of University Communications - November 1st, 2019
- Six Reasons A Lump-Sum Can Look Good And Five Reasons It Might Not - Forbes - November 1st, 2019
- If we aren't careful, we could miss the chance to learn cancer-fighting secrets from threatened whales and elephants - Genetic Literacy Project - November 1st, 2019
- Intersex people on how they want to be treated and accepted - Dazed - October 30th, 2019
- Genetic Risk and Obesity Linked to Likelihood of Post-Surgical Hernia and Infection, Study Finds - Genetic Obesity News - October 25th, 2019
- Actor Kathryn Hahn Says The Best Part Of Her Career Came Post-Kids - WJCT NEWS - October 25th, 2019
- DNA research holds the keys to human history but it's being weaponized by politicians - Haaretz - October 25th, 2019
- The family tree for the tree of life and feral cats; In-The-News for Oct. 24 - CFJC Today Kamloops - October 25th, 2019
- Everything You Need To Know About Male Breast Cancer In Black Men - BET - October 24th, 2019
- There are more male than female specimens in natural history collections - The Natural History Museum - October 24th, 2019
- The family tree for the tree of life and feral cats; In-The-News for Oct. 24 - Airdrie Today - October 24th, 2019
- Weekly genetics review: Production systems the focus in new breed indexes - Beef Central - October 23rd, 2019
- The science of sensations - Penn: Office of University Communications - October 23rd, 2019
- Common causes of hair loss in men - The Voice Online - October 23rd, 2019
- What Happened When I Found the Right Doctor for My Depression - Yahoo Lifestyle - October 23rd, 2019
- This image shows the aftermath of two galaxies colliding - CTV News - October 20th, 2019
- Why many get the back story of Kenyas huge success wrong - Daily Nation - October 20th, 2019
- Photos show the mysterious giant squid over 150 years of discovery - Business Insider - October 20th, 2019
- Dr. Sharyn Lewin & The Lewin Fund Honor Breast Cancer Awareness Month with Women's Health & Wellness Symposium at the Jewish Federation of... - October 19th, 2019
- Gender-Specific Brain Cells Have Just Been Discovered Inside The Brains of Mice - ScienceAlert - October 19th, 2019
- Genomics has a diversity problem. Here's how scientists are tackling it - Massive Science - October 19th, 2019
- I TRIED to forgive Gina Rodriguez but her white woman tears are wearing me out - TheGrio - October 19th, 2019
- A Top Dermatologist Says This Is the Best Skincare Regimen to Treat Acne - Yahoo Lifestyle - October 19th, 2019
- World Menopause Day: Five things you need to know about premature menopause - FemaleFirst.co.uk - October 19th, 2019
- Two-sport star shines for Queen's Gaels, national rugby teams - The Kingston Whig-Standard - October 19th, 2019
- Genes Linked to Sex Ratio and Male Fertility in Mice - Michigan Medicine - October 17th, 2019
- Weekly genetics review: Defining the 'core breeder' in times of drought - Beef Central - October 17th, 2019
- When we could be bitter, choose to be better - PostBulletin.com - October 17th, 2019
- How Women Can Help Kill the Taboo Around Mental Health and Men - BELatina - October 17th, 2019
- Shaping the future of beauty tech: Interview with Goodiebox CEO and co-founder Rasmus Schmiegelow - EU-Startups - October 17th, 2019
- Experiences with pain of early medical abortion: qualitative results from Nepal, South Africa, and Vietnam - BMC Blogs Network - October 16th, 2019
- Great white tagging program off N.S. stirs debate over treatment of sharks - National Observer - October 16th, 2019
- Investing in Love & Affection Pays Off - Just Ask Birds - Courthouse News Service - October 14th, 2019
- Great white tagging program off N.S. stirs debate over treatment of sharks - CFJC Today Kamloops - October 14th, 2019
- Freaks of Nature: Mother Nature, genetics sometimes play strange tricks on white-tailed deer - Athens Daily Review - October 14th, 2019
- Miss America 2020: Meet The 51 Ladies Competing For The Crown - International Business Times - October 14th, 2019
- New 3D mammogram technology crucial in early detection of breast cancer - Aiken Standard - October 13th, 2019
- The Pinke Post: When we could be bitter, choose to be better - The Daily Republic - October 13th, 2019
- Notes To Myself As A Girl: Female CEOs Tell Girls What They Need To Hear Most - Forbes - October 11th, 2019
- Trypanosomatid parasites in bees... taking a walk on the wild side? - BugBitten - BMC Blogs Network - October 11th, 2019
- A Look at Past Cornell-Affiliated Nobel Prize Laureates: How their Legacy will Inspire Generations of Scientists to Come - Cornell University The... - October 11th, 2019
- One in 28 women develops breast cancer - The New Indian Express - October 11th, 2019
- BEYOND TRIM: Don't give breast cancer a helping hand - SaukValley.com - October 9th, 2019
- New Guidelines: Breast Cancer Prevention Drugs - Everyday Health - October 9th, 2019
- New West Genetics is Bringing Stable Seeds to the Hemp Industry - New Cannabis Ventures - October 9th, 2019
- 5 habits of highly successful entrepreneurs revealed - GrowthBusiness.co.uk - October 9th, 2019
- Imprinting on Mothers May Drive New Species Formation in Poison Dart Frogs - Nature World News - October 9th, 2019
- Prospective Study Characterizes PCa Risk Linked to BRCA1, BRCA2 Mutations - Renal and Urology News - September 29th, 2019
- 'Shark Tank's' Kevin O'Leary Just Teased the Show's Season Premiere With This Interesting Tweet - Showbiz Cheat Sheet - September 29th, 2019
- 3 more wolves added to Isle Royale on Lake Superior - Interlochen - September 29th, 2019
- Influencers eye the future of seedstock industry | Livestock - High Plains Journal - September 29th, 2019
- That toning myth - Jamaica Observer - September 29th, 2019
- Scientists Recreate the Face of a Denisovan Using DNA - Smithsonian - September 23rd, 2019
- PRACTICALLY ACTIVE: Failing follicles? That's a hairy subject - Arkansas Democrat-Gazette - September 23rd, 2019
- Four More Wolves Moved To Isle Royale, One Dies Shortly Thereafter - National Parks Traveler - September 23rd, 2019
- 3 wolves added to Isle Royale population during fall 2019 wolf project - UpperMichigansSource.com - September 23rd, 2019
- Women Scientists Were Written Out of History. It's Margaret Rossiter's Lifelong Mission to Fix That - Smithsonian.com - September 23rd, 2019
- Blue Devil of the Week: A Renowned Baboon Scientist - Duke Today - September 23rd, 2019
- How to hire the right replacement heifers for your job - Beef Magazine - September 23rd, 2019