Nothing
against fossils, but when it comes to tracing the story of human
evolution they’re taking a back seat lately to everything from DNA to
lice, and even the DNAof lice. A few years ago scientists compared the DNA of
body lice (which are misnamed: they live in clothing, not the human
body) to that of head lice, from which they evolved, and concluded that
the younger lineage split off from the older no more than 114,000 years
ago, as I described in a cover story last year.
Since body lice probably arose when a new habitat did, and since that
habitat was clothing, that’s when our ancestors first needed a
haberdasher. The Y chromosome has been an even greater source of clues
to human evolution, showing among other things that the most recent
common ancestor of all men alive today lived 89,000 years ago in
Africa, and that the first modern humans walked out of Africa about
66,000 years ago and became the ancestors of everyone outside that
natal continent.
The Y
chromosome is at it again. Scientists reported this week that an
analysis of Y chromosomes in a dozen African populations sheds light on
one of the more controversial questions in human prehistory: did
innovations such as animal herding spread because their inventors did,
migrating to new places and teaching the natives new tricks, or because
the idea spread on its own, as neighboring tribes noticed the new trick
and adopted it, and then neighbors of those guys did the same, on and
on until the idea had spread like wildlfire?
According to a paper in the online version of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
pastoralism—cattle- and sheep-herding—arrived in southern Africa 2,000
years ago on a wave of human migration from eastern Africa, not by the
spread of ideas to neighbors near and far.
“There's a
tradition in archaeology of saying people don’t move very much; they
just transfer ideas,” said genetic anthropologist Joanna Mountain
of Stanford University, senior author of the paper with geneticist
Peter Underhill. But in this case, at least, the people themselves
moved.
Scientists
knew about two prehistoric migrations of Bantu-speaking people from
eastern Africa, where pastoralism first arose, to southern Africa:
30,000 years ago and again 1,500 years ago. But anthropological
evidence showed that the first sheep and cattle herds existed in
southern Africa 2,000 years ago. That suggested that the idea jumped
from group to group (“hey, look what those guys are doing”) without the
people themselves actually trekking south.
The Stanford
scientists analyzed genetic variation on the Y chromosome, which is
passed almost intact from father to son. The only change through the
generations occurs through rare mutations. By counting and comparing
mutations, geneticists can trace ancestries of living men, in this case
13 populations in Tanzania and in the Namibia-Angola-Botswana border
region of southern Africa. In this case, it revealed a novel mutation
in some men in both places, which implies that those men had a common
ancestor. The novel mutation arose in eastern Africa about 10,000 years
ago and was carried by migration to southern Africa about 2,000 years
ago not by Bantu-speakers, in whom the mutation is absent, but in
speakers of what’s called the Nilotic language. These unsuspected
ancestors first brought herds of animals to southern Africa before the
Bantu migration.
Why did they
migrate south? Underhill suspects that a shift in rainfall 10,000 years
ago caused some people to stay in rainy areas and grow crops, while
others moved to dry regions and lived the nomadic life of herders, he and colleagues proposed in the June issue of the journal Antiquity.