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Interbreeders

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted February 14, 2006.


A breakthrough theory reimagines human origins and debunks the whole concept of 'pure races.'

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There's an anthropologist in St. Louis who used a computer simulation to prove that people interbred with other species for at least a million years. You know what that means -- Homo erectus is more ripe for punnage than ever. Washington University professor Alan R. Templeton published his findings in the recently issued Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, explaining that he'd finally disproved the popular "out of Africa" theory, which holds that Homo sapiens zoomed out of Africa roughly 100,000 years ago, killing every other hominid it met (including fellow tool users and fire makers Homo erectus and Homo neanderthalis).

Instead of killing, Templeton found, early humans were more likely having sex with these hominids on their way out of Africa into Asia and Europe. They also probably migrated out of Africa in three waves, rather than one or two, seeding Asia and Europe with early hominids who later cozied up with newly arrived groups.

Templeton figured all this out using a computer program called GEODIS, which reconstructs early human mating patterns by doing statistical analysis on population distributions of haplotypes, chunks of genes that get inherited together over long swaths of history. Based on what he found, Templeton says, "The hypothesis of no interbreeding is so grossly incompatible with the data that you can reject it."

It's always struck me as kind of weird that the dominant theory of human evolution -- often called the "replacement theory" or "single origin hypothesis" -- holds that Homo sapiens evolved all on its own in Africa, without any interbreeding with its comely hominid neighbors. The single origin hypothesis says that when Homo sapiens migrated out of Africa, it simply destroyed (or, in polite anthropology-speak, "replaced") all the other hominids. But even if we assume that Homo sapiens are such a bloodthirsty lot that their response to another form of intelligent life is to battle it, we all know what happens in battles. The conquered are often raped and/or enslaved. This seems like such a time-honored occurrence -- even inspiring a snotty little book by some prim profs a few years ago called A Natural History of Rape -- that it's hard to believe it wasn't happening in our earliest evolutionary incarnations.

Now you may be saying, sure, humans could have been raping Homo erectus, but that doesn't mean any of them made babies -- that's like saying humans who rape chimps are interbreeding. And you'd be right if it turned out to be true that there was only one migration out of Africa 100,000 years ago, when Homo sapiens had diverged enough from its fellow hominids that matings were likely to be sterile. But if Templeton's findings are accurate, there were migrations out of Africa 1.5 million years ago and 700,000 years ago, as well as the familiar one we all know and love, 100,000 years ago.

What Templeton's arguing is that the forebears of the creatures we are today -- Homo sapiens sapiens -- were interbreeding with the forebears of other hominid groups. His theory about the migrations at 700,000 years ago could help explain the sudden expansion in brain pan size among humans at that time, as well as evidence that tool use had begun to spring up among hominid groups across Europe and Asia. In Templeton's vision, we are hybrid hominids, not some pure species whose coolness and ingenuity allowed it to sweep over Asia and Europe "replacing" everything we found. We didn't "replace" other hominids; often, we merged with them.

Interestingly, Templeton sees his discoveries as a refutation of more than the replacement hypothesis. He sees it as scientific proof that racism has no rational basis. "You can be 99 percent confident that there was recurrent genetic interchange between African and Eurasian populations," he says. "So the idea of pure, distinct races in humans does not exist. We humans don't have a tree relationship, but rather a trellis. We're intertwined."

It's good to remember that for every scientist who wants to prove that Africans are genetically distinct from Europeans, there's one who wants to prove they aren't. Especially in conservative times, science is often the enemy of oppressed racial groups (think of "The Bell Curve," the Tuskegee syphilis studies and countless "scientific" eugenics programs). But once in a while, an anthropology geek with a cool computer program reminds us that real science does not give answers that fit easily into cultural stereotypes. Good science overturns them.

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Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd whose ancestors interbred with nanotech smart matter from Jupiter.

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Not quite the connection
Posted by: Jesse on Feb 14, 2006 11:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I haven't seen this guy's work, but there are other reasons besides being bloodthirsty that humans could have replaced other hominids.

First, climate change. One thing about Neandertals is that they are really cold-adapted. Everything we know about them points to a species that could deal really well with arctic conditions. That all changes about 25,000 years or so ago. Neandertals are also not found too far afield from Europe and Asia. When things got warm, it may well have put a lot of stress on the populations. Modern humans for sure killed them-- there is too much evidence of inter-sub-species warfare-- but they may also have simply been able to make a few more babies and live in a slightly wider range of places, just enough to tip the balance. This also applies if Homo Sapiens was a slightly more efficient hunter than the erectus and Neandertals. Even a 1% efficieny gain makes a huge difference over 30,000 years.

Second, this would not explain why there are any distinct human subspecies at all. I haven't seen a genetic assay of any other hominid species, and I would expect that only Neandertals are available. But in order to get somethign as distinct as a Neandertal you have to be separate for a while. A long while.

Third, one big reason we don't see matings of often of, say, chimps and bonobos, which are about as closely related as we are to Neandertals, is that the sexual signals don't match. That is, they don't even notice each other, anymore than deer notice elk in heat. There's more work to be done in this field, but her point about rape here should be taken with a grain of salt. People do not rape chimps or gorillas, they just kill them.

Fourth, the connection the author tries to draw about racism, while sort of well taken, doesn't work well. No serious anthropologist has ever really argued that humans are separate species or that "races" exist. If anything, one of the more recent studies showed there was more genetic variation among Africans than any other racial group. (This, by the way, would point away from the regionalist hypothesis, since Africans would therefore have been around long enough to develop the variations, and have started with a sufficiently diverse population). That research does more to explode racist myths than anything else.

I'd like to see the work and see if the above points are addressed, though.

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» RE: Not quite the connection Posted by: Benjaminsjw
Great piece.
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 14, 2006 4:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Makes sense to me. But that's because one of my favorite Hollywood lines is from that movie comedy about the waspy Senator who gets mixed up with an African-American woman and says that all we need to do to overcome the race problem is to keep mixing our genes. (That's the PG-13 version. His words used the everyday street language: Keep f***ing each other.) Seems we've been doing that for a long, really long time.

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Neanderthals rocked!
Posted by: alternet reader Dan on Feb 14, 2006 6:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I always suspected the "National Geo" story of the neanderthals gazing hopelessly across the straits of Gibraltar because they couldn't figure out how to build a boat was a little weak. Years ago I read about research suggesting interbreeding (http://cogweb.ucla.edu/ep/Neanderthal.html), and it made sense, unless you were a genetic purist of some type. How otherwise did these people who could survive ice ages just give up when confronted with the advincing moderns? Some kind of weird "13th Warrior" scenario? I emailed an authority once when I was thinking of including a modern neanderthal in some fiction -- asked him if the girl next door was a neanderthal, would I be able to tell? He said, probably not...

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» RE: Neanderthals rocked! Posted by: Jesse
» All the comforts of science. Posted by: Sojourner
Read Dr. Linda Beckerman
Posted by: dlf on Feb 15, 2006 8:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What scientists now believe is that everyone started out with dark skin in the first place because it is protective against absorbing too much Vitamin D, which is toxic. Too much vitamin D causes calcium to be pulled from the intestines and bones and deposited in soft tissues all over the body, damaging the kidneys, heart and blood vessels. Dark skin screens out UV radiation and your body, which uses UV to produce Vitamin D, produces less of it - a real evolutionary advantage at the lower latitudes where we began.

So where did the 10,000+ shades of paler brown, beige, pink, white and what Crayola crayons used to call "flesh" come from? Archaeological data places the origin of genetically modern humans in sub-Saharan Africa approximately 140,000 years ago. Humans then began migrating out of Africa in successive waves, starting approximately 100,000 years or 5000 generations ago. Now that scientists have mapped the human genome, they are homing in on when each wave began their outward bound journey and where they migrated to. So far they have confirmed that everyone on the entire planet, even the 1.3 billion Chinese, have a common ancestor back in Africa.
read the rest here

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we're all mutts?
Posted by: lamar on Feb 15, 2006 5:27 PM   
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And I had really started taking pride in my mutt heritage, with a list of ethnicities and nationalities long enough to give you a headache. Now it turns out we're all mutts. Is there nothing unique anymore?

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» RE: we're all mutts? Posted by: dlf
You should educate yourself before posting on important subjects
Posted by: balitwilight on Feb 17, 2006 7:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Your article would be very topical if it had been written in, say, 1923. You misleadingly state that "for every scientist who wants to prove that Africans are genetically distinct from Europeans, there's one who wants to prove they aren't". Actually (much as with denial of global warming or intelligent design), for every 1 fake "scientist" who asserts that Africans are genetically distinct, there are tens of thousands, or more, who accept the peer-reviewed, current scientific consensus that race is a social construct and has NO biological basis. Modern Genetics, Biochemistry, etc have all demonstrated this.

Your misguided article is based on your fundamental confusion of the very real biological concept of SPECIES and that old insiduous lie of RACE. The controversy that you discuss centers on how Homo Sapiens Sapiens arose as a SPECIES. Since we arose as one species, millions of years ago, genetically distinguishable population groups arose based mostly upon geographic distribution and migration patterns. Science has shown that the genetic group differences have nothing to do with "RACE". Let me repeat. There is no way that the genetic differences across human populations map to the imaginary racial constructs that people today still hold onto so dearly. In fact, scientists have shown that given any two people of the same "RACE", each is just as likely to share more genetic commonality with someone of another "RACE". In other wods, no scientist today believes that Africans are genetically distinct from Europeans. There skins are darker, sure, but the "black" Zimbabwe native may share more genetic commonality with the "white" Norwegian than does the "white" Irish native. Got it everyone? Race is phony, and this has been established scientifically. There is no more debate, no controversy among biological scientists - only in the culture that holds on to these lies for dear life. Whatever Homo erectus did with whomever is just irrelevant to your subject of "race".

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Templeton's Straw Men & Hominids
Posted by: sincere on Feb 17, 2006 8:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This might be an interesting theory, but Templeton's main flaw (or that of the author of this peice) from the jump is that he/she's created a straw man with this statement:

[...Homo sapiens zoomed out of Africa roughly 100,000 years ago, killing every other hominid it met (including fellow tool users and fire makers Homo erectus and Homo neanderthalis).]

but this simply isn't true. christopher stringer and most other Recent Out of Africa theorists have never posited the "killer ape" hypothesis---that modern sapiens emerging from Africa simply "wiped out" more archaic forms. with neanderthal for instance, out-competing has been placed as the culprit rather than some blood thirsty orgy.

the Multi-Regional theory (which Templeton seems to be attempting to revive in a new way) has long engaged in such strawmen ideas, charging that the Recent Out of Africa model is asserting some violent early human, and that it wreaks of racism---charges that have never stuck. Ironically, it's often been felt that the Multi Regionalists (MRm) like Wolpoff in lobbing charges of racism were engaging in a pre-emptive strike, as numerous *actual racists* have used (or mis-used) the MRm to advocate outdated near poly-genesis type ideas for so-called human "races."

i'd like to see what numerous geneticists think of Templeton's computer simulation derived theory. i haven't seen much peer review since it came out in late 2005. whatever the case, it certainly hasn't caused any overthrow of the Recent Out of Africa model (ROAm)---something the author of this article seems to be trying to assert. alot more than a computer simulation will be needed to refute volumes of both fossil and genetic records (including the Human Genome project) that have backed up the ROAm.

thus far for instance, no Neanderthal or other archaic sapiens DNA has been found in modern humans. and when Neanderthal DNA was examined previously, it was found to be radically different from modern sapiens. while such things aren't conclusive, they point to a general trend.

time will tell if Templeton is given any real credence, or his simulation goes the way of the much celebrated (then debunked) Mungo Man of a few yrs past---once put forth by the Multi Regionalists as a revolution, only to be dismissed as an error in dating later on.

Sin

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Purebreed a way to be weak
Posted by: sisterbluerose on Feb 27, 2006 9:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Purebreed a way to be weak. Certainly we noticed when the KKK were bunches of weakbrained b****ds. As a certain science fiction story said, "We must all love one another or die."

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