www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
23.37.45.67  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://s2.washingtonpost.com/3e8af65/66ab5cb65affc56a2986ec72/65253ab30e88230c94874e32/15/32/66ab5cb65affc56a2986ec72
Effective URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2024/07/28/human-ancestors-dna-africa/?utm_source=email&utm_medium=acq-intl&utm_campaign...
Submission: On August 01 via api from BE — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="wpds-c-gRPFSl wpds-c-gRPFSl-jGNYrR-isSlim-false">
  <div class="transition-all duration-200 ease-in-out"><button type="submit" data-qa="sc-newsletter-signup-button" class="wpds-c-kSOqLF wpds-c-kSOqLF-uTUwn-variant-primary wpds-c-kSOqLF-eHdizY-density-default wpds-c-kSOqLF-ejCoEP-icon-left">Sign
      up</button></div>
</form>

Text Content

Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness
SubscribeSign in



Advertisement


Democracy Dies in Darkness
ScienceSpace Animals Health Environment
ScienceSpace Animals Health Environment



THE PICTURE OF EARLY-HUMAN ORIGINS IN AFRICA GROWS MORE COMPLEX

Researchers say multiple groups of early modern humans intermingled and spread
across Africa, not just in small areas in the east and south, before moving to
Europe and Asia.

8 min
889
Sorry, a summary is not available for this article at this time. Please try
again later.

A sunset view of the Hora site in Malawi. Excavating at the site, researchers
found two of the oldest human skeletons in Africa to preserve ancient DNA. The
remains have ancestry showing widespread genetic admixture across all of eastern
and central Africa. (Jessica Thompson)
By David Kohn
July 28, 2024 at 9:00 a.m. EDT

For decades, scientists who studied early modern humans believed that our
ancestors initially inhabited only small areas of Africa, the savannas of the
eastern and southern part of the continent, and then moved north into Asia,
Europe and beyond. In this view, early humans bypassed West and Central Africa,
especially tropical forests. These areas, the argument went, were populated much
later.


Subscribe for unlimited access to The Post
You can cancel anytime.
Subscribe


But now, a growing group of researchers has cast doubt on this narrative.
Working in Senegal, Cameroon, Malawi and elsewhere, they are uncovering evidence
that early humans spread across much more of Africa before venturing elsewhere.
This work has moved the field beyond the old out-of-Africa narrative and is
transforming our understanding of how multiple groups of early modern humans
intermingled and spread across the continent, providing a more nuanced picture
of our species’ complex origins.

“It’s becoming more and more clear that humans didn't originate in a single
population in one region of Africa,” says Eleanor Scerri, an archaeologist at
the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Jena, Germany. “If we really want
to understand human evolution, we need to look at all of the African continent.”



Most researchers agree that early modern humans emerged in Africa between
200,000 and 300,000 years ago. About 60,000 years ago, they spread to other
parts of the world. Until recently, though, most experts thought these humans
populated West and Central Africa, especially the tropical forests there, only
within the past 20,000 or so years.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



For some researchers, this narrative made little sense. “Humans like to move
around a lot,” says University of Pennsylvania geneticist Sarah Tishkoff, who
has been working to unravel Africa’s deep genetic lineage for more than two
decades. “They had this beautiful continent, they could move all over, go to
different niches, with different resources.”

The reason no one found evidence of early human settlement in West and Central
Africa, Scerri and others say, is that few people had looked there. For many
decades, most researchers tended to focus on low-hanging fruit — areas of the
continent where fieldwork was less difficult. Because the climate is dryer and
cooler in East and South Africa and the terrain is more open, fossils are easier
to find and date. Most of West and Central Africa is hot and humid, so bones and
DNA degrade more quickly. In addition, that region can be a challenging place to
work, not only because much of it is thickly forested, but also because some
areas are enmeshed in long-running and chaotic conflicts.



Some research suggests that cultural bias may also have played a role. “Most
research has been spearheaded by people from the global North,” says Yale
University paleoanthropologist Jessica Thompson. “And their perspective is,
‘Well, we want to know how people got out of Africa, to where we come from.”

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



As a result of all these factors, most scientists have focused largely on sites
in South and East Africa. This has contributed to the idea that early modern
humans primarily inhabited these regions. Frustrated that the academic
establishment didn’t take their ideas seriously, a few researchers began trying
to uncover evidence that supported their views. Over the past decade or so,
they’ve found it.

Last year, a group that included scientists from Senegal, Europe and the United
States reported that modern humans had lived at a site on the coast of Senegal
150,000 years ago. Previous estimates put the earliest human habitation in West
Africa at 30,000 years ago.

Moreover, the site was in a mangrove forest, rather than the typical grassland
or sparse savanna usually associated with early-human habitation. Scerri says
her latest research in Senegal, not yet published, may push this date back even
further. “It’s clear that there were different people in different places doing
different things,” she says. “And they were there for a long time. A lot longer
than we realized.”

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Another study, from 2022, analyzed DNA from the bones of 34 people who lived
across sub-Saharan Africa between 5,000 and 18,000 years ago. Examining such
ancient DNA is important because it offers a much clearer window onto the
structure of more ancient African populations. The research showed that from
80,000 to 20,000 years ago, populations that had been fairly isolated from one
another began to interact across large swaths of the continent. These links
spanned thousands of miles, from Ethiopia, through Central African forests and
down to South Africa.

Share this articleShare

“People were clearly moving quite broadly across Africa,” says Thompson, one of
the study’s co-authors. “They were not staying in these little isolated
populations.”

And a paper published four years ago in Nature examined the remains of two
children found at a rock shelter in Cameroon, in the western part of Central
Africa. One of the children lived 3,000 years ago, while the other lived 8,000
years ago. The researchers, from Harvard and other institutions, managed to
collect DNA from the two — the first ancient human DNA ever sequenced from
Central Africa. They detected four separate human lineages between 60,000 and
80,000 years ago, including a previously unknown lineage — what they called a
“ghost population” — that probably lived in West Africa. The results provide
more support for the idea that humans have been in West Africa for far longer
than previously realized and adds to the evidence that humanity’s roots exist
across more than one region of Africa.

Experts say it’s important to note that close relatives of modern humans —
Neanderthals, Homo erectus and several other species — had already spread beyond
Africa to Europe and Asia, in some cases millions of years ago. But these groups
contributed relatively small amounts of DNA to the modern human lineage.



Because it can be so difficult to find fossils and retrieve ancient DNA in many
parts of Africa, scientists have had to develop innovative approaches to
establish early-human habitation. For instance, Thompson and her colleagues
studied sediments around Lake Malawi in the northern part of the country. Over
thousands of years, the lake shrank and grew, depending on the amount of
rainfall. During wetter periods, the number of trees around the lake would
expand significantly.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



But Thompson found that during a wetter period starting 80,000 years ago (and
continuing today), the number of trees did not increase nearly as much as
expected. Instead, the scientists found an abundance of charcoal. Thompson says
this shows that humans were living in the region, perhaps in fairly large
numbers, and were burning wood on a significant scale, either to modify the
environment for hunting or to cook or keep warm — or all three.

A key aspect of this new understanding is the Pan-African hypothesis: Scerri and
others argue that modern humans probably evolved from the intermingling of
different groups from a range of areas of the continent. “There were a number of
modern human populations living in different regions of Africa, and we emerged
over time from the complex interactions between them,” Scerri says. “Basically,
we’re a mix of a mix of a mix of a mix.”

In research published last year, University of California at Davis population
geneticist Brenna Henn and her colleagues examined the genomes of almost 300
Africans from across the continent. By analyzing and comparing the genetic data,
they were able to construct a model for how humans originated within the
continent over the past several hundred thousand years. They found that modern
humans descended from at least two distinct populations who lived in different
parts of the continent. She and her colleagues are now analyzing genomes from
3,000 people, mostly Africans but also people of African descent who live
elsewhere, as well as Indigenous Americans and others.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Scerri has also found evidence to support the Pan-African idea. She has shown
that Middle Stone Age culture persisted in West Africa until quite recently,
less than about 11,000 years ago. This culture, a particular way of making stone
tools, disappeared much earlier in other parts of the continent, 30,000 to
50,000 years ago. This is important, she says, because it is precisely what the
Pan-African theory predicts: “In this model, you’d expect that each region would
have its own distinctive cultural trajectory, due to periods of isolation. This
research shows how this was possible.”

Not everyone is convinced. Richard Klein, a paleoanthropologist at Stanford
University who has spent decades studying early modern human origins and
migration in Africa, says, “I don’t understand the evolutionary mechanism
behind” the pan-African origins theory.

Pontus Skoglund, a population geneticist at the Francis Crick Institute in
London who has collaborated with Scerri, says that the Pan-African idea is
plausible, but that he isn’t fully persuaded. “To me, it also seems possible
that a large portion of present-day people’s ancestry might be found in a single
region,” he says. “But we don’t know.” He says there is still “a lot of
uncertainty” about who was where and when.

Scerri agrees that more research is needed. But after years of fighting
skepticism, she says she feels vindicated that the new perspective has caught
on. “Right now, this is such an exciting area to work,” she says. “It’s really
an incredible story, one that’s emerging before our eyes.”

Share
889 Comments
More science and environment stories
HAND CURATED
 * The picture of early-human origins in Africa grows more complex
   July 28, 2024
   
   The picture of early-human origins in Africa grows more complex
   July 28, 2024
 * Scientists delve into the give-and-take of chimp conversations
   July 27, 2024
   
   Scientists delve into the give-and-take of chimp conversations
   July 27, 2024
 * Domesticated rabbits can ‘rewild’ thanks to feral DNA, study finds
   July 21, 2024
   
   Domesticated rabbits can ‘rewild’ thanks to feral DNA, study finds
   July 21, 2024

View 3 more stories


Newsletter1-5/wk
Speaking of Science
The latest, greatest and weirdest in science news, every Wednesday. Expect news
on discoveries, animals and space.
Sign up


Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →


Advertisement



Advertisement

TOP STORIES
back
Try a different topic

Sign in or create a free account to save your preferences
Advertisement


Advertisement

Company
About The Post Newsroom Policies & Standards Diversity & Inclusion Careers Media
& Community Relations WP Creative Group Accessibility Statement Sitemap
Get The Post
Become a Subscriber Gift Subscriptions Mobile & Apps Newsletters & Alerts
Washington Post Live Reprints & Permissions Post Store Books & E-Books Today’s
Paper Public Notices
Contact Us
Contact the Newsroom Contact Customer Care Contact the Opinions Team Advertise
Licensing & Syndication Request a Correction Send a News Tip Report a
Vulnerability
Terms of Use
Digital Products Terms of Sale Print Products Terms of Sale Terms of Service
Privacy Policy Cookie Settings Submissions & Discussion Policy RSS Terms of
Service Ad Choices
washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * Sitemap
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices









WE CARE ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our 43 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as
unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your
choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate
interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will
be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.

If you click “I accept,” in addition to processing data using cookies and
similar technologies for the purposes to the right, you also agree we may
process the profile information you provide and your interactions with our
surveys and other interactive content for personalized advertising.

If you do not accept, we will process cookies and associated data for strictly
necessary purposes and process non-cookie data as set forth in our Privacy
Policy (consistent with law and, if applicable, other choices you have made).


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS COOKIE DATA TO PROVIDE:

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Create profiles for
personalised advertising. Use profiles to select personalised advertising.
Create profiles to personalise content. Use profiles to select personalised
content. Measure advertising performance. Measure content performance.
Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different
sources. Develop and improve services. Store and/or access information on a
device. Use limited data to select content. Use limited data to select
advertising. List of Partners (vendors)

I Accept Reject All Show Purposes