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Sunday, February 01, 2009 - 11:56 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . Two groups of researchers seem to have solved the mystery of how and when the first human settlers spread out through the Pacific Islands. One group studied the evolution of a stomach bacteria while the other examined the evolution of language, but both came up with remarkably congruous results. The
evolutionary trajectory implied by words and bugs begins with an
initial migration from Taiwan 5,000 years ago, with a first wave of
people spreading to the Philippines and a second to western Polynesia [Wired News].
In the bacterial study, researchers took stomach samples from people native to Taiwan, Australia, Melanesia, Polynesia and New Guinea. http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com They measured genetic variation in Helicobacter pylori,
a common gut microbe that traveled with humans when they first left
Africa more than 60,000 years ago…. They found that the [bacteria] from
people’s guts in Polynesia and Melanesia–islands stretching from New
Caledonia all the way to Samoa–were genetically similar to the samples
from aboriginal people in Taiwan. What’s more, the Taiwanese bacteria
had more genetic diversity than other populations [The Scientist].
Because genetic mutations accumulate over time, these results indicate
that the early Taiwanese people were the ancestors of the other groups
that split off over the centuries. http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
In the second of the two papers, both of which were published in Science [subscription required], researchers examined the evolution of the languages used by Pacific people. The
Austronesian language family is one of the largest in the world,
including 1,200 languages spread across the Pacific region, Professor
Russell Gray said. “By studying the basic vocabulary from these
languages, such as words for animals, simple verbs, colours and
numbers, we can trace how these languages evolved,” Gray said [AFP].
The researchers found that the language group arose around 5,200
years ago in Taiwan. By tracing the subsequent evolution within the
language family, they determined that the Austronesian people paused at
least a thousand years before moving into the Philippines; they then
paused there before moving into Polynesia. The last places to be
settled were far-flung islands such as Hawaii and Easter Island, as
well as New Zealand (researchers believe the Maori people got there
only 700 or 800 years ago). Research fellow
Simon Greenhill said the expansion could be linked to new technology,
such as better canoes, and social techniques. “Using these new
technologies the Austronesians and Polynesians were able to rapidly
spread through the Pacific in one of the greatest human migrations
ever,” he said [Sydney Morning Herald].
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