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View Full Version : Khoisan hunter-gatherers have been the largest population throughout most of modern-human history



curupira
12-07-2014, 12:50 AM
Quite unexpected, is it not?

Khoisan hunter-gatherers have been the largest population throughout most of modern-human demographic history, according to this study:


The Khoisan people from Southern Africa maintained ancient lifestyles as hunter-gatherers or pastoralists up to modern times, though little else is known about their early history. Here we infer early demographic histories of modern humans using whole-genome sequences of five Khoisan individuals and one Bantu speaker. Comparison with a 420 K SNP data set from worldwide individuals demonstrates that two of the Khoisan genomes from the Ju/’hoansi population contain exclusive Khoisan ancestry. Coalescent analysis shows that the Khoisan and their ancestors have been the largest populations since their split with the non-Khoisan population ~100–150 kyr ago. In contrast, the ancestors of the non-Khoisan groups, including Bantu-speakers and non-Africans, experienced population declines after the split and lost more than half of their genetic diversity. Paleoclimate records indicate that the precipitation in southern Africa increased ~80–100 kyr ago while west-central Africa became drier. We hypothesize that these climate differences might be related to the divergent-ancient histories among human populations.
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/141204/ncomms6692/full/ncomms6692.html

curupira
12-07-2014, 08:29 PM
bump

Roy
12-07-2014, 08:58 PM
It's not surprising much considering the fact that they have the oldest Y-chromosome haplogroups alive in the world, actually it's consistent with this data. On the other hand the astonishing thing is that they managed to found some individuals without supposed additional ancestry from other groups of humanity. However it's difficult to tell how credible this information is.

curupira
12-10-2014, 03:58 PM
It's not surprising much considering the fact that they have the oldest Y-chromosome haplogroups alive in the world, actually it's consistent with this data.

I said surprising in relation to their number nowadays, which is pretty small.

Petros Houhoulis
12-10-2014, 04:43 PM
Well, they are lucky to be hunter gatherers and still exist in the modern world...

Roy
12-10-2014, 05:01 PM
I said surprising in relation to their number nowadays, which is pretty small.

It's paradoxical as people usually assume that small isolated population = small genetical diversity but in their case it's the other way around because they didn't come through bottleneck effect unlike other people.