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Thread: Americas 'settled in three waves'

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    Americas 'settled in three waves'

    Posted in this forum as the work is scientific in nature and the relevent migrations predate all of the WAB History Forums.

    The biggest survey of Native American DNA has concluded that the New World was settled in three major waves.

    But the majority of today's indigenous Americans descend from a single group of migrants that crossed from Asia to Alaska 15,000 years ago or more.

    Previous genetic data have lent support to the idea that America was colonised by a single migrant wave.

    An international team of researchers have published their findings in the journal Nature.

    "For years it has been contentious whether the settlement of the Americas occurred by means of a single or multiple migrations from Siberia," said co-author Prof Andres Ruiz-Linares from University College London (UCL).

    "But our research settles this debate: Native Americans do not stem from a single migration. Our study also begins to cast light on patterns of human dispersal within the Americas."

    The team analysed data from 52 Native American and 17 Siberian groups, studying more than 300,000 variations in their DNA known as Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, or SNPs.

    This allowed them to examine patterns of genetic similarities and differences between the population groups.

    Later waves

    The second and third migrations have left an impact only in Arctic populations whose languages belong to the Eskimo-Aleut family and in the Canadian Chipewyan who speak a language that belongs to the Na-Dene family.

    However, even these populations have inherited most of their genome (the DNA sequence contained in the nuclei of cells) from the earliest migration.

    Eskimo-Aleut speakers derive more than 50% of their DNA from what the researchers call "First Americans", and the Chipewyan around 90%. This reflects the fact that the two later streams of migration from Asia mixed with the populations descended from the first wave.

    "There are at least three deep lineages in Native American populations," said co-author David Reich, professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School.

    "The Asian lineage leading to First Americans is the most anciently diverged, whereas the Asian lineages that contributed some of the DNA to Eskimo-Aleut speakers and the Na-Dene-speaking Chipewyan from Canada are more closely related to present-day East Asian populations."

    Evidence from mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), the genetic information in the mitochondria that power cells, supports descent from a single founding group of colonisers, who crossed from Siberia into America across the Bering land bridge.

    This natural bridge appeared during the last Ice Age when sea levels were lower, allowing hunters to trek between the two continents.

    But a three-stage migration has been proposed before, based on a controversial interpretation of language relationships and physical features of the teeth of Native American groups.

    The team also found that once in the Americas, people expanded southward along a route that hugged the coast, with populations splitting off along the way.

    After their divergence, there was little gene flow among Native American groups, especially in South America.

    Two glaring exceptions to this simple dispersal were also discovered. First, Central American Chibchan-speakers have ancestry from both North and South America, reflecting a migration back from South America to Central America.

    Second, the Naukan and coastal Chukchi from north-eastern Siberia carry distinctive "First American" DNA. Thus, Eskimo-Aleut speakers migrated back to Asia, bringing Native American genes.

    The team's analysis was complicated by the influx into the hemisphere of European and African immigrants since 1492 and the 500 years of genetic mixing that followed.

    To address this, the authors developed methods that allowed them to focus on the sections of peoples' genomes that were of entirely Native American origin.
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18770963
    Last edited by tantalus; 12 Jul 12, at 21:07.

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    Second, the Naukan and coastal Chukchi from north-eastern Siberia carry distinctive "First American" DNA. Thus, Eskimo-Aleut speakers migrated back to Asia, bringing Native American genes.
    I find this to be particularly fascinating.

    "It sucks over there. We came back home." It strikes me as unlikely, although the DNA does not lie.

    What I find most fascinating is the speed at which the New World settlers migrated South. There are dated remains in South America to 13,000+ years ago. You'd have thought that there would have been a migration stall in the USA area, due to the excellent weather, abundant game, and fertile soil. Why traverse Mexico and the Yucatan when the bulk of the USA is available?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chogy View Post
    "It sucks over there. We came back home." It strikes me as unlikely, although the DNA does not lie.
    Extremely easy to explain. They follow the seals.
    Chimo

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    What I find most fascinating is the speed at which the New World settlers migrated South. There are dated remains in South America to 13,000+ years ago. You'd have thought that there would have been a migration stall in the USA area, due to the excellent weather, abundant game, and fertile soil. Why traverse Mexico and the Yucatan when the bulk of the USA is available?
    hunter-gatherers are naturally nomadic, moving with the seasons and to avoid outside tribes. a diffusion pattern of even a few miles each year would easily allow for colonization of both americas over 1000-2000 years.
    There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "My ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."- Isaac Asimov

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    Quote Originally Posted by astralis View Post
    hunter-gatherers are naturally nomadic, moving with the seasons and to avoid outside tribes. a diffusion pattern of even a few miles each year would easily allow for colonization of both americas over 1000-2000 years.
    Sure, without a doubt, but hunter-gatherers could wander forever in the continental USA area, following the bison, fishing the rivers. Northern Mexico is a nasty place, even along the coasts. You'd have thought it'd form a sort of barrier.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chogy View Post
    Sure, without a doubt, but hunter-gatherers could wander forever in the continental USA area, following the bison, fishing the rivers. Northern Mexico is a nasty place, even along the coasts. You'd have thought it'd form a sort of barrier.
    Until about the 10,000 years ago the interior of the US was extremely arid and moving deep inland away from the rivers would be very difficult. The coasts got the rain and year round rivers for water.

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    Remember also there's mounting evidence for far earlier occupation of the Americas, just not ones that suit the Clovis scenario.
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