All present day non African human populations are the result of subdivisions that took place after their ancestors left Africa at least 60 thousand years ago. How long did it take for these separations to take place? Almost 20 thousand years, during which they were all part of a single population. Where did they live for all this time? We don’t know, yet.
This is a conversation that could have taken place one year ago, now it is possible to give clearer answers to these questions thanks to a study recently published in Nature Communications ed by the researchers from the University of Padova, in collaboration with the University of Bologna (Department of Cultural Heritage), the Griffith University of Brisbane, the Max Planck Institute of Jena and the University of Turin.
The ancestors of all present day Eurasians, Americans and Oceanians, moved out of Africa between 70 and 60 thousand years ago. After reaching Eurasia these early settlers idled for some millennia as a homogeneous population, in a presumably localized area, before expanding their range across the whole continent and beyond. This event set the basis for the genetic divergence between present day Europeans and East Asians, and can be dated to around 45 thousand years ago.
On the one hand, the dynamics that led to the broader colonization of Eurasia have been already reconstructed by some of the authors in a previous publication in 2022, and occurred through a series of chronologically, genetically and culturally distinct expansions. On the other hand, the geographic area where the ancestors of all non Africans lived after the Out of Africa and that acted as a “Hub” for the subsequent movements of Homo sapiens has been the matter of a long standing debate, with most of West Asia, North Africa, South Asia or even South East Asia having been listed as potentially suitable locations.
In their latest work, the authors deployed a novel genetic approach and identified ancient and modern populations from the Persian Plateau as the ones carrying genetic traces that most closely resemble the features of the Hub population, pinpointing the area as the likely homeland of all early Eurasians.
"The most difficult part", says Leonardo Vallini, first author of the study, "has been to disentangle the various confounding factors constituted by 45 thousand years of population movements and admixtures that took place after the Hub was settled".
The multidisciplinary study also investigated the paleoecological characteristics of the area at the time, and confirmed it as suitable for human occupation, potentially capable of sustaining a larger population than other parts of West Asia.
"Identifying the Persian Plateau as a Hub for early human migration opens new doors for archaeological and palaeoanthropological research” added co-author Professor Michael Petraglia of Griffith University in Brisbane.
In fact, the Persian plateau will be the focus of the ERC Synergy Project LAST NEANDERTHALS, recently awarded to co-author Stefano Benazzi, professor at the University of Bologna (Department of Cultural Heritage).
"In line with the results of the study," says Benazzi, "this ERC project aims to explore and unravel the intricate biocultural events that occurred between 60 thousand and 40 thousand years ago, focusing also on the Persian Plateau".
"With our work we found a home to 20 thousand years of shared history between Europeans, East Asians, Native Americans and Oceanians. This leg of the human journey out of Africa is fascinating, since it is the one where we also met and mixed our genes with the ones of Neanderthals", concluded Professor Luca Pagani, senior author of the study.