Evolutionary Bioinformatics (Jan 2015)

Human Dispersal Out of Africa: A Lasting Debate

  • Saioa López,
  • Lucy Van Dorp,
  • Garrett Hellenthal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4137/EBO.S33489
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11s2

Abstract

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Unraveling the first migrations of anatomically modern humans out of Africa has invoked great interest among researchers from a wide range of disciplines. Available fossil, archeological, and climatic data offer many hypotheses, and as such genetics, with the advent of genome-wide genotyping and sequencing techniques and an increase in the availability of ancient samples, offers another important tool for testing theories relating to our own history. In this review, we report the ongoing debates regarding how and when our ancestors left Africa, how many waves of dispersal there were and what geographical routes were taken. We explore the validity of each, using current genetic literature coupled with some of the key archeological findings.