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Modern humans may have left Africa not once but twice

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Modern humans may have left Africa not once but twice

A new study has suggested that though modern humans are known to have left Africa in a wave of migration around 50,000 years ago, another smaller group - possibly a different subspecies - left the continent 50,000 years earlier.

Washington, March 15 : A new study has suggested that though modern humans are known to have left Africa in a wave of migration around 50,000 years ago, another smaller group - possibly a different subspecies - left the continent 50,000 years earlier.

Michael Schillaci, an assistant professor in the Department of Social Sciences at the University of Toronto, carried out the study.

According to a report in Discovery News, while all humans today are related to the second "out of Africa" group, it's likely that some populations native to Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Australia, New Zealand and Indonesia retain genetic vestiges of the earlier migrants.

Schillaci also found that the earlier group of emigrants had some genetic similarity to Neanderthals, a hominid that left Africa much earlier, settling in Europe and parts of western and central Asia.

"This could be the byproduct of limited interbreeding with Neanderthals, or a shared more recent common ancestry with Neanderthals," Schillaci told Discovery News.

For the study, Schillaci calculated genetic similarity by comparing measurements of the cranium, the part of the skull that encloses the brain. In addition to actual DNA testing, researchers often use such skull measurements to establish relationships between ancient human groups.

Schillaci examined fossils representing at least 28 modern and prehistoric human populations.

He found that the earliest known individuals from the Near East were genetically similar to the earliest individuals from Australia, New Zealand and Indonesia.

All modern-day humans are more similar to Europeans who lived between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago - after the second wave from Africa.

"The most likely explanation is that the expansion out of Africa that was ancestral to the early Australasians occurred before the well-accepted expansion at around 50,000 years ago that led to the colonization of Europe," said Schillaci, adding that the first populations out of Africa were later "swamped genetically by the subsequent larger expansion."

Based on the findings, Schillaci concluded that the first human group to have left Africa "may well have been a separate subspecies" of modern human.

ANI

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