Articles features
The process of human migration out of Africa
London, Feb 21
Did human migration out of
Africa happen all at once or in phases? A new study provides fresh
insights into the long-standing debate.
The new study goes by the
model that suggests that dispersal into the Arabian interior began in
multiple phases approximately 75,000 to 130,000 years ago when increased
rainfall provided sufficient freshwater to support expanding
populations.
"The dispersal of early human populations out of
Africa is dynamically linked with the changing climate and environmental
conditions of Arabia."
"Although now arid, at times the vast
Arabian deserts were transformed into landscapes littered with
freshwater lakes and active river systems," wrote Ash Parton of the
University of Oxford in Britain.
"Such episodes of dramatically
increased rainfall were the result of the intensification and northward
displacement of the Indian Ocean monsoon, which caused rainfall to reach
across much of the Arabian Peninsula," he added.
Another
dominant hypothesis states that human populations expanded rapidly from
Africa to southern Asia via the coast lines of Arabia approximately
50,000 to 60,000 years ago.
Parton and colleagues, however,
present a unique alluvial fan aggradation (the deposition of material by
a river, stream, or current) record from south-east Arabia spanning the
past approximate 160,000 years.
Situated along the proposed
southern dispersal route, the Al Sibetah alluvial fan sequence provides a
unique and sensitive record of landscape change in south-east Arabia.
This
record is to date the most comprehensive terrestrial archive from the
Arabian Peninsula, and provides evidence for multiple humid episodes
during both glacial and interglacial periods.
Evidence from the
Al Sibetah alluvial fan sequence indicates that during insolation maxima
(period of greatest solar activity), increased monsoon rainfall led to
the widespread activation of drainage systems and grassland development
throughout regions that were important for the dispersal of early human
populations.
Previously, the timing of episodes of increased
humidity was largely linked to global interglacials, with the climate of
Arabia during the intervening glacial periods believed to be too arid
to support human populations.
Parton and colleagues suggest that
periods of increased rainfall were not driven by deglaciations every
100,000 years approximately, but by periods of maximum incoming solar
radiation every 23,000 years approximately.
The findings were reported in the journal Geology.