Support It

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Rivers Out Of Africa

Posted on 05:56 by Unknown
Lost river guided early humans out of Africa - environment - 16 September 2013 - New Scientist



I've noted before how science is often about finding missing pieces of the jigsaw and fitting them in place. This paper by Tom J. Coulthard, Jorge A. Ramirez, Nick Barton, Mike Rogerson, Tim Brücher, reported in New Scientist by Alyssa A. Botelho illustrates that as well as anything by adding a little bit more information to the account of human migration out of Africa.



The assumed routes Homo sapiens took out of Africa usually include migration north down the Nile which crosses the Sahara as a narrow fertile band in an otherwise arid desert, and by coastal spread from the Horn of Africa across the Red Sea and along the edge of the Arabian Peninsula. However, that didn't tie in with the archaeological evidence of stone tools in the western Sahara and Mediterranean coastal region which indicate human habitation much further west than the traditional routes suggest. For this reason, others had proposed a once-fertile Sahara with rivers running north to the Mediterranean. The problem was in working out how much water would have been in these rivers (and so whether they could have supported a human population) or where they were located.



Abstract

Human migration north through Africa is contentious. This paper uses a novel palaeohydrological and hydraulic modelling approach to test the hypothesis that under wetter climates c.100,000 years ago major river systems ran north across the Sahara to the Mediterranean, creating viable migration routes. We confirm that three of these now buried palaeo river systems could have been active at the key time of human migration across the Sahara. Unexpectedly, it is the most western of these three rivers, the Irharhar river, that represents the most likely route for human migration. The Irharhar river flows directly south to north, uniquely linking the mountain areas experiencing monsoon climates at these times to temperate Mediterranean environments where food and resources would have been abundant. The findings have major implications for our understanding of how humans migrated north through Africa, for the first time providing a quantitative perspective on the probabilities that these routes were viable for human habitation at these times.



Coulthard TJ, Ramirez JA, Barton N, Rogerson M, Brücher T (2013);

Were Rivers Flowing across the Sahara During the Last Interglacial? Implications for Human Migration through Africa.

PLoS ONE 8(9): e74834. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0074834


So it looks likely that the most westerly river provided the route across the Sahara, bringing our ancestor up to the Atlas Mountains and eventually to the shores of the Mediterranean in the area of the present-day Tunisia-Algeria border - further west than we normally assume but consistent with the stone tool evidence. The suggestion is that we then spread eastward along the coast to the Nile Delta and then into the Middle East and eventually into Europe and Asia, where we found our cousins, the Neanderthals and Denisovans who had been living there for some 200,000 years - the descendants of an earlier migration out of Africa by our immediate ancestors, H. heidelbergensis.



And so another piece of the jigsaw has been fitted into the fascinating human story of the last 100,000 years or so.



'via Blog this'




Share
Twitter

Tweet
StumbleUpon

Reddit

submit to reddit


Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Evolution, History | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Evolution Of A Plague of Locusts
    Magicicada adults and final stage nymphs. Photograph by Arthur D. Guilani If it hasn't happened already, and you live in the Eastern US...
  • Favourite Oxymorons - Religious Logic
    One of the more absurd arguments for religion (in this case Christianity) I've seen today is: "If God doesn't exist then there...
  • The Power Of The Story
    Once upon a time, in a continent not far away, there dwelt a puny ape who had learnt to walk upright so it could see further than other men ...
  • Why Did The Believer Cross The Road?
    Faith: The sure and certain way to know that ever other faith is wrong. Faith is just not a sensible way to live your life. If you tried to...
  • Christians - Try Not To Think About Matthew.
    What was it with Matthew, or whoever it was writing the stuff attributed to him in the Bible? Later on in the Bible, Matthew seems to presen...
  • What is Reddit FOR Exactly?
    Normally, I confine this blog to articles dealing with all aspects of religion, science as it relates to the claims of religion, and occasio...
  • A New Angle On Sex For Creationists
    The extent to which some males will go for sex is amazing, and this has nothing at all to do with dangly things - only females have these an...
  • Christianity Is No Excuse - ECHR
    European Court of Human Rights refuses to hear appeals in three ‘Christian persecution’ cases » British Humanist Association : Congratulatio...
  • Religion Kills - Mormon Massacre
    The Mountain Meadow Massacre To illustrate how readily and easily religions turn their followers into killers in the name of their gods, her...
  • Are The Bible's Publishers Breaking The Law?
    In England we have the Serious Crimes Act 2007 Part 2 of which came into force in 2008. Section 59 removed the Common Law offence of incit...

Categories

  • Agnosticism
  • Anthropology
  • Apologetics
  • Art
  • Astronomy
  • Atheism
  • Bible
  • Bible Contradictions
  • Biology
  • Birds
  • Catholics
  • Christianity
  • Christmas
  • Conservation
  • Cosmology
  • Cosmos
  • Creationism
  • Crime
  • Cults
  • Culture
  • Delusion
  • Democracy
  • Dogma
  • Evidence
  • Evolution
  • Faith
  • Fallacy
  • Feminism
  • Fraud
  • Freedom
  • Genealogy
  • Genocide
  • Geology
  • Gullibility
  • Health
  • Hindu
  • History
  • Hormones
  • Human Rights
  • Humanism
  • Humour
  • Hypocrisy
  • Intelligence
  • Islam
  • Judaism
  • Language
  • Learning
  • Logic
  • Memes
  • Mental Health
  • Miracles
  • Morality
  • Mormon
  • Music
  • Mythology
  • Nature
  • Oxfam
  • Parasitism
  • Peace
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Politics
  • Pope
  • Probability
  • Progress
  • Psychology
  • Qur'an
  • Racism
  • Religion
  • Religious abuse
  • Science
  • Secularism
  • Superstition
  • Theology
  • Vatican
  • Vegetarianism
  • Wildlife
  • Yule

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (201)
    • ►  October (22)
    • ▼  September (26)
      • Unintelligent Design
      • Religion And The History of Censorship
      • Thanks For Your Support
      • How Early Cells May Have Got Complex DNA
      • How Can You Tell A Creationist Is Lying?
      • Suspended Again
      • Religious Sneaks
      • Apologists' Dilemma
      • Fishy Fossil Monogamy
      • Playing With Evolution
      • How The Common Cold Was Intelligently Designed
      • Real Creationists Shouldn't Have Flu Jabs
      • Selfish Genes and Termite Indigestion
      • Rivers Out Of Africa
      • How Thieves Exploit Religious Gullibility
      • Evolving A Quickie
      • Evolution's 'Big Bang' Explained
      • Recent Evolution Underground
      • Even Our Bacteria Show How We Evolved
      • Speaking of Evolution
      • Evolution. It's Enough to Give You Goosebumps
      • God's Haemorrhoids or The Grapes of Wrath
      • Miniature Frog Can Hear With Its Mouth!
      • Brotherly Love - How Christians Settle Disputes
      • Impressions of Paris - Sacré-Cœur
      • Is God Omni-Irrational?
    • ►  August (12)
    • ►  July (16)
    • ►  June (24)
    • ►  May (24)
    • ►  April (16)
    • ►  March (20)
    • ►  February (15)
    • ►  January (26)
  • ►  2012 (269)
    • ►  December (17)
    • ►  November (20)
    • ►  October (22)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (21)
    • ►  July (23)
    • ►  June (23)
    • ►  May (16)
    • ►  April (41)
    • ►  March (37)
    • ►  February (18)
    • ►  January (17)
  • ►  2011 (30)
    • ►  December (19)
    • ►  November (11)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile