The ancestors of Australia's Aboriginal populations were not as genetically isolated from the rest of the world as once thought.
PENNY TWEEDIE/CORBIS
El estudio detallado del genoma puede aportar datos inesperados. Como los resultados que aquí aparecen. Hasta ahora se prensaba que los aborígenes australianos habían permanecido aislados en su mundo sin otros contactos. De análisis comparativos de su genoma resulta que no es cierto. Los aborígenes de Australia estuvieron en contacto con olas de migración procedentes de India con los se ha demostrado que comparten hasta un 11% de su ADN. ("Nature")
Some aboriginal Australians can trace as much as 11% of their genomes to migrants who reached the island around 4,000 years ago from India, a study suggests. Along with their genes, the migrants brought different tool-making techniques and the ancestors of the dingo, researchers say1.
This scenario is the result of a large genetic analysis outlined today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences1. It contradicts a commonly held view that Australia had no contact with the rest of the world between the arrival of the first humans around 45,000 years ago and the coming of Europeans in the eighteenth century.
“Australia is thought to represent one of the earliest migrations for humans after they left Africa, but it seemed pretty isolated after that,” says Mark Stoneking, a geneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, who led the study.