Monday, November 26, 2012

Genetic Confirmation Of Global Human Expansion 40,000 Years Ago




As any long time reader here understands, my conjecture of an earlier emergence of mankind taking place around 50,000 to 40,000 years ago demands that a global distribution then took place. Without that global distribution, my conjecture regarding a prior emergence of modernity is on pretty thin ice. Until now there was no evidence of this.

That problem is now answered here. A global distribution did take place and that opened the door for modernity to arise. I am pleased to see another prediction of the core conjecture get nailed down.

For new readers, it is enough to understand that the conjecture calls for mankind to occupy the now submerged continental shelf and migrate to space based refugia ahead of the planned crustal shift that ended the Ice Age and ushered in the Holocene. Our ancestors were then brought in to terraform the Earth.

Genetics suggest global human expansion

by Staff Writers

Hinxton, England (UPI) Oct 30, 2012


Scientists using DNA sequencing say they've uncovered a previously unknown period when the human population expanded rapidly in prehistory.

The sequencing of 36 complete Y chromosomes revealed this population explosion occurred 40,000 to 50,000 years ago, between the first expansion of modern humans out of Africa 60,000 to 70,000 ago and the Neolithic expansions of people in several parts of the world starting 10,000 years ago, Britain's Wellcome Trust Sangster Institute reported.

"We have always considered the expansion of humans out of Africa as being the largest population expansion of modern humans, but our research questions this theory," Wei Wei of the Sanger Institute and the West China University of Medical Sciences said.

"Now we've found a second wave of expansion that is much larger in terms of human population growth and occurred over a very short period, somewhere between 40,000 to 50,000 years ago."

One possible theory is that during the original out-of-Africa expansion, humans moved along the coastlines of the world, settling as they went.

Their origins and genetic makeup would make them suited to coastal life, but not to the demands of living inland.

"We think this second, previously unknown population boom, may have occurred as humans adapted to their new environment after the first out-of-Africa expansion," institute researcher Qasim Ayub said.

"It took them tens of thousands of years to adapt to the mountainous, forested surroundings on the inner continents. "However, once their genetic makeup was suited to these new environments, the population increased extremely rapidly as the groups traveled inland and took advantage of the abundance of space and food," Ayub said.

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