Going east: new genetic and archaeological perspectives on the modern human colonization of Eurasia
- PMID: 16902130
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1128402
Going east: new genetic and archaeological perspectives on the modern human colonization of Eurasia
Abstract
The pattern of dispersal of biologically and behaviorally modern human populations from their African origins to the rest of the occupied world between approximately 60,000 and 40,000 years ago is at present a topic of lively debate, centering principally on the issue of single versus multiple dispersals. Here I argue that the archaeological and genetic evidence points to a single successful dispersal event, which took genetically and culturally modern populations fairly rapidly across southern and southeastern Asia into Australasia, and with only a secondary and later dispersal into Europe.
Comment in
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Human dispersal into Australasia.Science. 2007 Feb 2;315(5812):597-8; author reply 597-8. doi: 10.1126/science.315.5812.597b. Science. 2007. PMID: 17272703 No abstract available.
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