Our most common male ancestor walked the earth 209,000 years ago –
earlier than scientists commonly thought - according to new research
from the University of Sheffield.
The pioneering study, conducted by Dr Eran Elhaik from the
University of Sheffield and Dr Dan Graur from the University of Houston,
also debunked the discovery of the Y chromosome that supposedly
predated humanity.
In the new research, published in the European Journal of Human Genetics,
Dr Elhaik and Dr Graur used conventional biological models to date our
most common male ancestor 'Adam' in his rightful place in evolutionary
history. The ground breaking results showed that this is 9,000 years
earlier than scientists originally believed.
Their findings put 'Adam' within the time frame of his other half
'Eve', the genetic maternal ancestor of mankind. This contradicts a
recent study1 which had claimed the human Y chromosome originated in a
different species through interbreeding which dates 'Adam' to be twice
as old.
Debunking unscientific theories is not new to Dr Elhaik. Earlier
this year he debunked Hammer's previous work on the unity of the Jewish
genome and together with Dr Graur they refuted the proclamations made by
the ENCODE project on junk DNA.
"We can say with some certainty that modern humans emerged in Africa a little over 200,000 years ago," said Dr Elhaik.
"It is obvious that modern humans did not interbreed with
hominins living over 500,000 years ago. It is also clear that there was
no single 'Adam' and 'Eve' but rather groups of 'Adams and 'Eves' living
side by side and wandering together in our world."
Dr Elhaik added: "We have shown that the University of Arizona study lacks any scientific merit.
"In fact, their hypothesis creates a sort of 'space-time paradox
'whereby the most ancient individual belonging to Homo sapiens species
has not yet been born. If we take the numerical results from previous
studies seriously we can conclude that the past may be altered by the
mother of 'Adam' deciding not to conceive him in the future, thus,
bringing a retroactive end to our species.
"Think of the movie Back to the Future, when Marty was worried
that his parents would not meet and as a result he wouldn't be born -
it's the same idea.
"The question to what extend did our humans forbearers interbreed
with their closest relatives is one of the hottest questions in
anthropology that remains open." [...] eurekalert.org/
Actualización 27-01-14. “Adán” vivió hace 209 mil años
El estudio pionero fue conducido por Eran Elhaik, de la Universidad de Sheffield, y Dan Graur, de la Universidad de Houston, Texas.
En esta investigación, publicada en el European Journal of Human Genetic, Elhaik y Graur dataron nuestro más común ancestro masculino, Adán, en su correcto lugar dentro de la historia evolutiva. Los resultados mostraron que es 9 mil años anterior a lo que pensaban los científicos. Estos hallazgos ponen a Adán dentro del marco temporal de Eva, el ancestro genético materno de la humanidad. Eso contradice un estudio reciente que había sostenido que el cromosoma Y humano [el que heredamos de nuestro padre y abuelo, sin mezcla materna, todos los hombres] se originó en una especie diferente por medio de interprocreación, lo cual hace a Adán dos veces más antiguo”. Y claro, no un Homo sapiens todavía...
jueves, 23 de enero de 2014
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Actualización. “Adán” vivió hace 209 mil años
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