The Journey of Man: A Genetic OdysseyAllen Lane, 2002 - 224 pages Around 60,000 years ago, a man walked the soil of Africa. Every person alive today is descended from him. How did he come to be father to all of us - a real life Adam? To find out, Spencer Wells embarked on a unique voyage of discovery, travelling the world and deciphering the genetic codes of people from the Sahara Desert to Siberia. He reveals how our DNA enables us to work out where our ancestors lived, (and who they may have fought, loved and learned from); to re-trace their footsteps from Africa to the far corners of the earth ; to understand how we evolved into such a huge variety of sizes, shapes and races - and, ultimately, to create a family tree for the whole of humanity. |
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Page 77
... earliest sign of the Upper Palaeolithic in the Indian subcontinent . The date , however , is a problem - the earliest clearly modern artefacts date from no earlier than 31,000 years ago . Nearby Batadomba Lena cave contains the earliest ...
... earliest sign of the Upper Palaeolithic in the Indian subcontinent . The date , however , is a problem - the earliest clearly modern artefacts date from no earlier than 31,000 years ago . Nearby Batadomba Lena cave contains the earliest ...
Page 148
... earliest layers were systematically explored . What she found there would change our concept of human history . Kenyon found evidence for human settlement at Jericho dating from around 10,000 years BC - hunter - gatherer communities ...
... earliest layers were systematically explored . What she found there would change our concept of human history . Kenyon found evidence for human settlement at Jericho dating from around 10,000 years BC - hunter - gatherer communities ...
Page 172
... earliest Mesopotamian civilizations - has geographic and cultural links back to the earliest days of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent . - While the genetic data supports the notion of a population connec- tion among some of the ...
... earliest Mesopotamian civilizations - has geographic and cultural links back to the earliest days of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent . - While the genetic data supports the notion of a population connec- tion among some of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aborigines actually Adam Africa agriculture analysis ancient animals anthropologists apes appear Asian Australia Cavalli-Sforza cent central Asia China chromosomes clan climate coastal colleagues common ancestor continent culture Darwin defined descendants developed earliest early human east Asia Eurasian Europe Europeans evolution evolutionary expansion extinct favour frequency genes genetic data genetic diversity genetic variation geneticists genome Hindu Kush hominid Homo erectus human diversity human genetic human migration human populations hunter-gatherers hunting ice age impala India Indo-European Indo-European languages infer ingredients journey known languages leap lifestyle linguistic living marker Mediterranean Middle East Middle Eastern migration million mitochondrial DNA modern humans molecules mtDNA mutations Native Americans Neanderthals Neolithic non-African northern nucleotide Nyae origin past perhaps polymorphisms recent region route sample Siberia simply soup recipes south-east Asia southern species spoken spread steppe suggests thousands trace unique Upper Palaeolithic western Y-chromosome lineages