Out of Africa: celebrating 100 years of human-origins research
Out of Africa vs. Multiregional / “It’s Complicated” Models
- Some argue genetic data has decisively killed classic multiregionalism; alternatives are framed as crackpot or religious.
- Others counter that leading geneticists describe a more uncertain picture between ~2M–500k years ago: ancestors of modern humans may have been in both Africa and Eurasia and later mixed.
- A commenter lists challenges to a simple, recent single-exodus model: very old “sapiens-like” fossils in Eurasia, archaic DNA in non-Africans not seen in Africans, divergent Y-chromosome lineages, tool continuity in Asia, and early American evidence.
- Replies emphasize:
- Earlier out-of-Africa migrations and multiple bottlenecks are already part of the mainstream model.
- Admixture with Neanderthals, Denisovans, and unknown archaics fits “OOA + interbreeding,” not multiregional continuity.
- Fossil dates before Homo sapiens or from small, extinct side lineages don’t overturn African origins of the main lineage.
Religion, Ethnicity, and Origin Myths
- Discussion over which religious groups prefer multi-regional vs. single-origin myths.
- Nation of Islam’s Yakub story is cited as an example of modern myth-making; there’s debate over whether it is truly “Islamic” or a separate, syncretic religion.
- Idea that many ethnic/tribal religions articulate distinct origin myths for their own group.
Politics, Racism, and How Theories Are Used
- Some say multiregionalism historically appealed to racists and nationalists (e.g., as a Han-Chinese homeland narrative); OOA undercuts claims of deep racial separation.
- Others argue OOA has also been weaponized to claim post-African groups are “more evolved,” showing that racist frameworks simply absorb new data.
- One commenter explicitly defends presenting OOA in a way that maximizes its anti-racist, unity-promoting power, even as details get more complex.
Genetics, Race, and Behavior
- Long subthread on whether scientists avoid uncomfortable interpretations about population differences in cognition and behavior.
- Points raised:
- Population structure is easily detectable in genomes; alleles affecting traits should, in principle, differ in frequency between groups.
- Critics respond that within-group variation exceeds between-group differences, environment and confounders are huge, and much “race IQ” work has been methodologically flawed or later discredited.
- Some defend strong taboos around “scientific racism,” citing historical abuse; others say suppression invites conspiracy thinking.
Methodology, Bias, and Survivor Effects
- Question about fossil survivor bias: why so many early remains in Africa vs. elsewhere?
- Responses: preservation differences (e.g., bogs vs. tropics) and multiple converging lines of evidence (morphology, founder effects, molecular clocks) all point to Africa, while fossil locations are not equated with the exclusive origin point.
Neanderthals, Taxonomy, and Disease
- One commenter notes several sequenced Neanderthals carry a variant implicated in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, which could depress their population size and exert immune-system selection pressure; they say this appears under-discussed.
- Another predicts future reclassification of many “archaic species” as H. sapiens subspecies, arguing genetic distances are small and current taxonomy may reflect prestige-seeking.
- Some prefer to view all Homo members as “human,” suggesting labels like Homo gregarius to emphasize sociality over supposed superior “wisdom.”
Books and Miscellany
- Recommended reading on human origins and related topics includes narrative works on fossil hunters, Leakey’s memoir, Neanderthal life, and specific discoveries.
- Brief aside connects “Pontic Steppe” not to human origins but to leading theories on the Proto–Indo-European language homeland.