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The most recent ancestor of all
males living today was a man who lived in Africa around 59,000 years
ago, according to an international team of researchers.
The scientists from eight countries have drawn up a
genetic family tree of mankind by studying variations in the Y
chromosome of more than a thousand men from different communities around
the world. The Y chromosome is one of the two sex chromosomes (X and Y)
which only men carry (women carry two X chromosomes).
The new research confirms the Out of Africa theory
that modern humans originated in Africa before slowly spreading across
the world.
But the finding raises new questions, not least
because our most recent paternal ancestor would have been about 84,000
years younger than our maternal one.
The team believes there is an explanation. They
propose that the human genetic blueprint evolved as a mosaic, with
different pieces of modern DNA emerging and spreading throughout the
human population at different times.
Origins of man
Evidence from the fossil record suggests that modern
man originated in Africa about 150,000 years ago, before moving steadily
across the globe.
This Out of Africa hypothesis has been confirmed by
studies of mitochondrial DNA, the segment of genetic material that is
inherited exclusively from the mother.
Based on these studies, our most recent common
ancestor is thought to be a woman who lived in Africa some 143,000 years
ago, the so-called Mitochondrial Eve.
To find the common paternal ancestor, the team drew up
a genetic family tree of mankind. They mapped small variations in the Y
chromosomes of 1,062 men in 22 geographical areas, including Pakistan,
India, Cambodia, Laos, Australia, New Guinea, America, Mali, Sudan,
Ethiopia and Japan.
The new genetic family tree supports the Out of Africa
scenario. But it suggests that our most recent paternal ancestor would
have been about 84,000 years younger than our maternal one.
Regions of the genome
"You can ultimately trace every female lineage
back to a single Mitochondrial Eve who lived in Africa about 150,000
years ago," said Dr Spencer Wells of the Wellcome Trust Centre for
Human Genetics in Oxford, UK, who was part of the team.
"The Y chromosome we trace again back to Africa
but the date is about 80,000 years ago.
He told BBC News Online that the two studies could be
reconciled. "There's a different evolutionary history for each
region of the genome but they all are consistent in placing the ancestor
of all modern humans alive today in Africa."
The research, published in the journal Nature
Genetics, gives an intriguing insight into the journey of our ancestors
across the planet, from eastern Africa into the Middle East, then to
southeast and southern Asia, then New Guinea and Australia, and finally
to Europe and Central Asia.
Some modern-day men living in what is now Sudan,
Ethiopia and southern Africa are believed to be the closest living
descendants of the first humans to set out on that great journey tens of
thousands of years ago.
SOURCE: BBC
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