Humankind's ancestral 'homeland' pinpointed in Botswana
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[October 30, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A large ancient
wetlands region spanning northern Botswana - once teeming with life but
now dominated by desert and salt flats - may represent the ancestral
homeland of all of the 7.7 billion people on Earth today, researchers
said on Monday.
Their study, guided by maternal DNA data from more than 1,200 people
indigenous to southern Africa, proposed a central role for this region
in the early history of humankind starting 200,000 years ago, nurturing
our species for 70,000 years before climate changes paved the way for
the first migrations.
A lake that at the time was Africa's largest - twice the area of today's
Lake Victoria - gave rise to the ancient wetlands covering the Greater
Zambezi River Basin that includes northern Botswana into Namibia to the
west and Zimbabwe to the east, the researchers said.
It has been long established that Homo sapiens originated somewhere in
Africa before later spreading worldwide.
"But what we hadn't known until this study was where exactly this
homeland was," said geneticist Vanessa Hayes of the Garvan Institute of
Medical Research and University of Sydney, who led the study published
in the journal Nature.
The oldest-known Homo sapiens fossil evidence dates back more than
300,000 years from Morocco. The new study suggests that early members of
our species as represented by the Morocco remains may not have left any
ancestors living today, the researchers said.
"There is no contradiction between the presence of an early Homo
sapiens-like skull in northern Africa, which may be from an extinct
lineage, and the proposed southern African origin of the Homo sapiens
lineages that are still alive," added study co-author Axel Timmermann, a
climate physicist at Pusan National University in South Korea.
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Vanessa Hayes speaks with Headman ǀkun ǀkunta, from an extended Ju/'hoansi
family, who provided genome data for a study identifying the
ancestral homeland in southern Africa of all living members of our
species, in Namibia, February 6, 2019. Chris Bennett/Evolving
Picture/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
The ancient lake Makgadikgadi began to break up about 200,000 years
ago, giving rise to a sprawling wetland region inhabited by human
hunter-gatherers, the researchers said.
"It can be viewed as a massive extension of today's Okavango Delta
wetland area," Timmermann said.
Changes in Earth's axis and orbit caused climate, rainfall and
vegetation shifts that set the stage for early migrations of this
ancestral group of people away from the homeland region, first
toward the northeast 130,000 years ago, then toward the southwest
110,000 years ago, Timmermann added.
"Our study provides the first quantitative and well-dated evidence
that astronomically driven climate changes in the past caused major
human migration events, which then led to the development of genetic
diversity and eventually cultural, ethnic and linguistic identity,"
Timmermann added.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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