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Iloko
03-20-2015, 12:51 PM
Was there a single migration event or gradual mixing of cultures that gave rise to modern Japanese?

According to current theory, about 2,000-3,000 years ago, two populations, the hunter-gatherer Jomon from the Japanese archipelago, and the agricultural Yayoi from continental East Asia, intermingled to give rise to the modern Japanese population. However, some researchers have suggested otherwise, with the Jomon culture gradually transformed into the Yayoi culture without large migrations into modern day Japan.

To resolve the controversy, researchers Oota, Mano, Nakagome et al., identified the differences between the Ainu people (direct descendants of indigenous Jomon) with Chinese from Beijing (same ancestry as Yayoi).

The results from a genome-wide, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data strongly support the hybridization model as the best fit for Japanese population history. An initial divergence between the Ainu and Beijing group was dated to approximately 20,000 years ago, while evidence of genetic mixing occurred 5,000 to 7,000 years ago, older than estimates from the archaeological records, probably due to the effect of a further sub-population structure of the Jomon people.

The authors caution that further studies will need to be undertaken (especially ancient genome analysis of Jomon and Yayoi skeletal remains and genomic analysis of northeast Asians) to untangle the true evolutionary history of Japanese, in particular, the origins of the Jomon and Yayoi people and the source of gene flow to the Ainu.

The study is published in Molecular Biology and Evolution.

Source: http://phys.org/news/2015-03-genetic-evidence-modern-japanese.html

Goujian
03-21-2015, 06:37 AM
Problem is that neither the Ainu nor the Ryukyuans are representative of Jomon populations since:
The Jomon are extinct and were not a single population. There's a genetic difference between southern Jomon and northern Jomon.
Ainu have Nivkh or some other Paleo-Siberian admixture and thus are not 'pure Jomon'. But nevertheless Jomon are also Paleo-Siberians.
Ryukyuans are also genetically influenced by the Yayoi but to a lesser extent as Mainland Japanese.

Goujian
03-21-2015, 06:49 AM
To understand the marginalization and integration of the Jomon into the Japanese, one must understand the relations between the Emishi and Yamato state.

http://emishi-ezo.net/index.htm

coolstorybro
05-01-2015, 12:10 AM
http://www.jref.com/forum/images/imported/2006/11/ADMIRALTOGO-1.jpg