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12/7/2014 South African tribe who number 100k but were once most common humans on earth | Daily Mail Online http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article2861655/ThedwindlingSouthAfricantribenumberjust100000commonhumansearth.html 1/16 Home News U.S. Sport TV&Showbiz Australia Femail Health Science Money Video Travel Fashion Finder Science Home Pictures Gadgets Gifts and Toys Store Login shares 1.3k The dwindling South African tribe who number just 100,000 but were once the most common humans on earth Khoisan, or Bushmen, now number about 100,000 individuals For much of last 150,000 years tribe comprised majority of living humans Only during the last 22,000 years have other African ethnicities, including the ones giving rise to Europeans and Asians, become bigger By MARK PRIGG FOR MAILONLINE PUBLISHED: 01:10 GMT, 5 December 2014 | UPDATED: 10:55 GMT, 5 December 2014 New genetic research has revealed that a small group of huntergatherers now living in Southern Africa once was so large that it comprised the majority of living humans. Only during the last 22,000 years have the other African ethnicities, including the ones giving rise to Europeans and Asians, have become the bigger populations, researchers say. However, their fall has been quick the Khoisan (who sometimes call themselves Bushmen) now number about 100,000 individuals, while the rest of humanity numbers 7 billion. Scroll down for video The woman at the centre of the most State must back food banks, says Goggleboxgate: Ukip candidate's We must teach young girls about Revealed: Prince William's heartfelt Fiveyearold Scottish boy Presid whisk 91 View comments Site Web Enter your search Like Daily Mail Follow @dailymailtech Follow Daily Mail +1 Daily Mail Today's headlines Most Read Flipping great! The Apple iPhone 'that won't smash' because it detects when it's falling and turns over with... Electric eels control their prey WITHOUT touching it: Creatures send shock waves to manipulate their... Would YOU work in an office that banned toilet paper? Futuristic firm runs paperless workplace powered only... From rocks to riches: Gardener buys pile of stones for £50 only to discover one is an AngloSaxon 'grave... Mystery of the moon's magnetic core: Researchers find new evidence lunar centre once had a 'dynamo' at its... The view from space at 20,000mph and 4,000°F: Orion captures the flames of its re entry as it returns from... Why your bra doesn't fit: Sizes used by lingerie industry are based on men's WWI uniform! Pale Steve Jobs defends Apple in video testimony recorded months before his death in 2011 as entire $1bn... A $161m theatre of its own to keep product launches secret and a $74m gym for staff: New details of Apple's... California's drought is worst for 1,200 years but worse is to come, warn scientists Smoking can erase the Y Chromosome in males, researchers warn and say it could explain why more men die... Perfectly preserved 'ghost ship' from 1923 with wheel and mast still intact found off the Hawaii coast How NUCLEAR WASTE could spell the end Follow @MailOnline 2.2m Like DailyMail Sunday, Dec 7th 2014 5AM 28°C 8AM 29°C 5Day Forecast

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  • 12/7/2014 South African tribe who number 100k but were once most common humans on earth | Daily Mail Online

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    The dwindling South African tribe whonumber just 100,000  but were once themost common humans on earthKhoisan, or Bushmen, now number about 100,000 individualsFor much of last 150,000 years tribe comprised majority of living humans Only during the last 22,000 years have other African ethnicities, includingthe ones giving rise to Europeans and Asians, become bigger

    By MARK PRIGG FOR MAILONLINE

    PUBLISHED: 01:10 GMT, 5 December 2014 | UPDATED: 10:55 GMT, 5 December 2014

    New genetic research has revealed that a small group of huntergatherers now living in SouthernAfrica once was so large that it comprised the majority of living humans.

    Only during the last 22,000 years have the other African ethnicities, including the ones giving rise toEuropeans and Asians, have become the bigger populations, researchers say.

    However, their fall has been quick  the Khoisan (who sometimes call themselves Bushmen) nownumber about 100,000 individuals, while the rest of humanity numbers 7 billion.

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  • 12/7/2014 South African tribe who number 100k but were once most common humans on earth | Daily Mail Online

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article2861655/ThedwindlingSouthAfricantribenumberjust100000commonhumansearth.html 2/16

    THE KHOISAN The Khoisan speak in 'click' languages, andhave also maintained the greatest geneticdiversity known among human populations.

    The distinct clicks of their language have beenincorporated into Zulu and Xhosa speech.

    They have also contributed to the richness ofAfrikaans and South African English withwords such as 'eina' (ouch) and 'aikhona'(absolutely not).

    Khoisan traditions include snuff andmakaranga tobacco. 

    This is a very strong tobacco that is mixed withwild honey and made into a paste before beingallowed to dry. 

    The Khoisan (who sometimes call themselves Bushmen) now number about 100,000 individuals, while the restof humanity numbers 7 billion. however, they once comprised the biggest group on Earth, new analysis hasfound.

    Their lives and ways have remained unalteredfor hundreds of generations, with only recentevents endangering their huntergathererlifestyles, according to the study set to bepublished in Nature Communications.

    By comparing nearly all the genes of theseindividuals with the genomes of 1,462 peoplefrom around the world, the researchersdiscovered that the inflow of new genes into theKhoisan peoples has been quite restricted thepast 150,000 years, indicating that this largehuntergatherer culture was physically isolatedfor most of its history and that its men typicallydid not take wives from outside the group.

    'Khoisan huntergatherers in Southern Africaalways have perceived themselves as the oldestpeople' said Stephan Schuster, a former PennState University professor now at NanyangTechnological University in Singapore.

    Researchers on the project included scientists at Penn State and other research universities in theUnited States, Brazil, and Singapore.

    The Nature Communication paper analyses five study participants from different tribes in Namibia.

    The study investigated 420,000 genetic variants across 1,462 genomes from 48 ethnic groups inpopulations worldwide. 

    These analyses reveal that Southern African Khoisans are genetically distinct not only fromEuropeans and Asians, but also from all other Africans. 

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  • 12/7/2014 South African tribe who number 100k but were once most common humans on earth | Daily Mail Online

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article2861655/ThedwindlingSouthAfricantribenumberjust100000commonhumansearth.html 3/16

    Video kind courtesy of FOP Films. 

    The Khoisan speak in 'click' languages, and have also maintained the greatest genetic diversity known amonghuman populations.

    The paper's first author Hie Lim Kim, formerly at Penn State and now at Nanyang TechnologicalUniversity, said 'It is fascinating to unravel the population history of humankind over the last 150,000years.'

    By conducting extensive computational analyses, the team demonstrated that two of the sequencedindividuals showed no signs of having inherited any genetic material from members of other ethnicgroups. 

    Interestingly, these individuals are the oldest members of the Ju/'hoansi tribe, which still live inprotected areas of Northwest Namibia. 

    'This and previous studies show that the Khoisan peoples and the rest of modern humanity sharedtheir most recent common ancestor approximately 150,000 years ago, so it was entirely unexpectedto find that this group apparently did not intermarry with nonKhoisan neighbors for many thousandyears,' said Webb Miller, professor of Bioinformatics at Penn State and a member of the researchteam.

    'The current Khoisan culture and tradition, where marriage occurs either among Khoisan groups orresults in female members leaving their tribes after marrying nonKhoisan men, appears to be longstanding.'

     

    Stunning footage gives a short glimpse into Khoisan heritage

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  • 12/7/2014 South African tribe who number 100k but were once most common humans on earth | Daily Mail Online

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article2861655/ThedwindlingSouthAfricantribenumberjust100000commonhumansearth.html 4/16

    The Khoisan tribes, found in southern Africa, lived in nearisolation from the rest of humanity for thousands ofyears. The distribution of the three language families spoken by Khoisan people is shown on this map in green

    The cultural and genetic persistence of the Ju/'hoansi tribe is intriguing, the researchers say,because genetic and genomic analysis of ancient hominid lineages such as the Neanderthals, aswell as nonAfrican humans, have shown that intermarrying does occur frequently in these groupsand is traceable over the entire time span of 150,000 history during which anatomically modernhumans have lived.

    'We also observed gene flow for some of the other Khoisan groups, as defined by their largelyvarying language, but a key finding of this study is that, even today, individuals without genes fromother communities can be identified within the Ju/'hoansi population and possibly others,' Schustersaid.

    'Having identified nonadmixed Khoisan individuals, we could compare the effective population sizeof the Khoisan with that of other humans over more than 100,000 years,' said researchteammemberAakrosh Ratan, an assistant professor at the University of Virginia. 

    'In a twist of fate, the major ethnic groups today in Africa, Asia, and Europe increased in size onlyafter overcoming a population decline about 20,000 years ago.' 

    The researchers also investigated the hypothesis that climatic changes resulted in lessfavorableliving conditions, first in Western Africa and later in all of central subSaharan Africa. 

    'Using a paleoclimate model and data, we were able to show that glaciation in the northernhemisphere resulted in drier conditions in Western/Central Africa, while wetter conditions prevailedin Southern Africa,' said Alvaro Montenegro, an assistant professor at Ohio State University and theSao Paulo State University in Brazil. 

    'A hypothesis suggested by our new study is that the wetter climate conditions in the Khoisaninhabited parts of Southern Africa may have resulted in morefavorable living conditions.' 

     Researchers previously identified two migrations: One about 3,000 years ago, of nonAfricansentering east Africa, and a second one 900–1,800 years ago. 

     

     

     

     

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