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Trending nicely in the direction of - migration from Taiwan

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2009 10:24 am
by _Chap
This is an interesting story:

http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2009 ... aiwan.html

And here is a longer version, with interviews, though in French:

Pacific a Taiwanese colony

No Lamanites or Jaredites in this story at all. Could this interesting approach have any application on the American continent?

By tracking the evolution of language and gut bacteria, scientists may have settled a debate over the spread of humans across the Pacific.

The evolutionary trajectory implied by words and bugs begins with an initial migration from Taiwan 5,000 years ago, with a first wave of people spreading to the Philippines and a second to western Polynesia.

The findings, writes University of Cambridge archaeologist Colin Renfrew, "mark a substantial advance in our understanding of human population history" — and they involve some cutting-edge archaeological sleuthing to boot.

Physical remains, rather than linguistic patterns and microbes, are the preferred form of evidence for human migratory maps. Population genetics has also proved useful, with the progressive differences between modern and ancient DNA samples forming a biological tapestry of human history. But archaeologists attempting to understand the settlement of far-flung Pacific islands have been stymied by a lack of hard evidence, and genetic studies have proven inconclusive.

As a result, some historians concluded that settlement occurred gradually, over the last 30,000 years, by descendants of an initial population from inland southeast Asia — the so-called "slow boat from Wallacea" theory. Others hypothesized a recent, Taiwan-based origin.

In the latest analyses, published Thursday in Science, researchers abandoned traditional tools in favor of languages and Heliobacter pylori, a microbe that has co-evolved with humans for at least 50,000 years.

Bacterial samples taken from modern aborigines in Taiwan, Australia, Melanesia, Polynesia and New Guinea reveal a common, 5,000-year-old Taiwanese ancestor, which varied as human populations took their stomach bugs to the Philippines 3,000 years ago and then, several hundred years after that, to Western Polynesia and New Zealand.

A separate analysis of of 210 core vocabulary words in 400 Pacific-region languages produced an evolutionary tree of culture rather than organisms — and its branches followed with the migratory routes suggested by H. pylori's locale-specific evolution.

"The use of modern genetic data to reconstruct phylogenetic trees shows that the past is still 'within us' today," wrote Renfrew in a review of the studies. "Our past is within us in a different sense when the vocabularies of specific modern languages are the basis for historical analysis. And the past is within us in a very literal way when the early history of humankind is reconstructed based on the bacterial flora in our guts."

Re: Trending nicely in the direction of - migration from Taiwan

Posted: Sat Jan 31, 2009 2:30 pm
by _truth dancer
Wow, this is interesting.

Even more than the specific findings, I find myself amazed at how we are continaully bringing forth or creating something new from our past.

In a sense we are in a literal way our history.

Or, in another sense, we are the universe. :-)

Thanks for posting this article!

~td~