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Keyword: homosapien

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  • New DNA Research Changes Origin of Human Species

    05/18/2023 7:55:56 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 30 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | MAY 18, 2023 | By UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - DAVIS
    A new model for human evolution asserts that modern Homo sapiens stemmed from multiple genetically diverse populations across Africa rather than a single ancestral population. This conclusion was reached after researchers analyzed genetic data from present-day African populations, including 44 newly sequenced genomes from the Nama group of southern Africa. The research suggests that the earliest detectable split in early human populations occurred between 120,000 to 135,000 years ago, after long periods of genetic intermixing, and that subsequent migrations created a weakly structured genetic stem. Contrary to some previous models, this research implies that contributions from archaic hominins were unlikely...
  • Modern life's pressures may be hastening human evolution (Human Evolution Speeding Up)

    04/08/2009 6:19:32 PM PDT · by GOPGuide · 51 replies · 1,427+ views
    McClatchy ^ | April 8, 2009 | Robert S. Boyd
    snip It's even conceivable, he said, that our genes eventually will change enough to create an entirely new human species, one no longer able to breed with our own species, Homo sapiens. "Someday in the far distant future, enough genetic changes might have occurred so that future populations could not interbreed with the current one,'' Sussman said in an e-mail message. snip It's also the topic of a new book, "The 10,000 Year Explosion,'' by anthropologists Henry Harpending and Gregory Cochran of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. "For most of the last century, the received wisdom in the...
  • African cousins behind extinction of Indians 70,000 years ago!

    11/06/2005 1:00:32 AM PST · by CarrotAndStick · 50 replies · 1,915+ views
    Washington : Scientists have said that that the arrival of modern humans from Africa to South Asia some 70,000 years ago may have led to the extermination of the native populations. Researchers from the University of Cambridge have said that the arrival of Homo sapiens in regions like India and other parts of South Asia had most probably led to conflicts and competition between the Homo sapiens and the indigenous hominids (Homo heidelbergensis), leading to the latter’s extinction over the years. “While the precise explanations for the demise of the archaic populations is not yet obvious, it is abundantly clear...