Posted on 09/06/2004 5:15:41 PM PDT by blam
Maori men and women from different homelands
Thursday, 27 March 2003
"A New Zealand Warrior and his Wife", an engraving from the journal of Captain James Cook's 1784 visit on Endeavour (Pic: State Library of NSW)
The male and female ancestors of todays Maori people of New Zealand originated from different parts of the world, molecular biologists have said.
Their claims, made by Masters student Adele Whyte, the Tuapapa Putaiao Maori Fellow at Victoria University in Wellington, and her supervisor Professor Geoff Chambers, will be aired on ABC-TVs science program Catalyst tonight.
By comparing the DNA of people from Asia, across the Pacific Ocean and New Zealand, Whyte and Chambers have revealed a 'living genetic map' of ancient Maori migration routes.
The findings confirm archaeological evidence that the ancestors of todays Maori originally set out from mainland south-east Asia 6,000 years ago, hopped from island to island, starting with Taiwan, and arrived in New Zealand 800 to 1,000 years ago.
However the research also brings startlingly new evidence that as Maori ancestors migrated one group of islands to the next, men from Melanesian communities joined the boats. This changed the genetic mix, and lead to the differences observed in the genetic make-up of todays Maori men and women.
The research involved two separate genetic mapping processes. The Southeast Asian homeland was confirmed by Chambers research into the frequency of two different genes that influence the bodys reaction to alcohol. He found that while Asian people have both gene types, Maori and Pacific Islanders have inherited only one.
He looked back along the trail of migration to try and work out where the gene was lost. The indigenous people from Taiwan have both genes, but a lower frequency of one - the very gene that the Maori now lack.
We think this one was lost at the first step of migration, when people left what is now Taiwan, Chambers told ABC Science Online.
Adele Whyte studied the genetic origins of Maori for her Masters thesis (Pic: Victoria University)
The second mapping process involved Whytes examination of sex-linked genetic markers, namely mitochondrial DNA in women, and Y-chromosomes in men. The research found that in addition to the alcohol genes, female Maori have other genetic markers which confirm their ancient Asian origin. To her surprise, however, the men have genetic markers that show a Melanesian ancestry.
As a result of intermarriage along the migration trail, the signatures of the mitochondrial DNA from women have stayed more island south-east Asian, and the Y-chromosomes are more Melanesian, Whyte told ABC Science Online.
We think both men and women set off together, and recruited local guides who were probably men. Women stayed with the south-east Asian populations, and Melanesian men were recruited along the way.
Genetic bottlenecks
Whyte also analysed the haplotypes (groups of closely linked genes) carried on mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited only through the female line. Each population has a unique range of haplotypes. While Europeans have over 100 haplotypes in a particular region of DNA, studies so far have only found four different Maori haplotypes in the same region.
The reason for this difference is what we call a genetic bottleneck. When people leave an island to go to the next island, obviously not everybody gets on the boat, so some of the genetic diversity is being lost, she said. Some of the maternal lineages may not have got on the boat, so theyre not carried on to the next place.
Whyte has now identified 10 haplotypes in New Zealand Maori. From that we have worked out that 56 women came to New Zealand to create the diversity of todays population, she added.
Whyte said these findings were consistent with Maori legend.
The story I was told when I was growing up is that there was a fleet of seven great waka (canoes) that came to New Zealand," she said. "Every tribe knows which waka their ancestors arrived in. My ancestors were in a waka called Takitimu.
There might have been 20 people travelling in a canoe the size of a waka. Seven waka, thats about 140 people. And if, as we think, about half or 56 of these people happen to be women, it does seem to tie in.
November bump.
I wouldn't say the Melanesians were Negroids. I'm not sure but I think they, as well as the Aborigines of Australia, are cosnidered distinct from Negroids.
I see them defined as Negritos...How that may differ from African Negros, I have no idea. (Negritos seem to pop up in a lot of places though.)
No idea either, but the term Negrito is new to me. I think Aborigines are quite distinct from Negroids and not quite related to Caucasoids either. But then, looking at the range of Caucasians......
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December bump.
Because language acquisition can be divorced from genetics. Your ancestry may be Irish, but you and your relatives here in the US speak English. You might have cousins born in Mexico who speak Spanish.
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I agree that ALL polynesians probably are descendants of a group of people having their origins in what is not Taiwan, the Philippines and Indonesia.
There are linguistic links to early indonesian languages. For example, although the Indonesian word for a coconut is “kelapa” and a coconut tree “pohon kelapa”, there is another word used only poetically for the coconut: “Niur” Coincidence? I doubt it.
As another exercise look at the names of numbers from one to ten, not in Indonesian, which adopted many Arabic words,but at Javanese or Balinese and compare them to the Maori words. No one could deny the linguistic connection.
in what is NOW Taiwan, etc....
We think both men and women set off together, and recruited local guides who were probably men. Women stayed with the south-east Asian populations, and Melanesian men were recruited along the way.
Someone just put a link to this thread - interesting. Narikela is the word of coconut in Sanskrit, nariyal in Hindi.
A plausible scenario. An all-male raiding party arrives at an island inhabited by a different people, kills off all the males, and takes the women.
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