Genetic evidence on modern human origins

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Anthropology
Creator Rogers, Alan R.; Jorde, Lynn B.
Title Genetic evidence on modern human origins
Date 1995
Description A review of genetic evidence leads to the following conclusions concerning human population history: (1) Between 33,000 and 150,000 years ago the human population expanded from an initial size of perhaps 10,000 breeding individuals, reaching a size of at least 300,000. (2) Although the initial population was small, it contained at least 1000 breeding individuals. (3) The human races separated several tens of thousands of years before their separate expansions. (4) Before their expansions the separate racial populations were small. These inferences are inconsistent with both the multiregional and the replacement models of modern human origins. They support the "weak Garden of Eden" hypothesis, which holds that the human populations separated some 100,000 years ago but did not expand until tens of thousands of years later.
Type Text
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Volume 67
Issue 1
First Page 1
Last Page 36
Subject Population history; Mitochondrial DNA; Mismatch distribution; Intermatch distribution; Replacement hypothesis; Population bottlenecks
Subject LCSH Human beings -- Origin; Human genetics -- History; Population -- History; Population genetics; Race
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Rogers, A. R., & Jorde, L. B. (1995). Genetic evidence on modern human origins. Human Biology, 67(1), 1-36.
Rights Management (c)Wayne State University Press
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 10,481,599 bytes
Identifier ir-main,1262
ARK ark:/87278/s69c7fkr
Setname ir_uspace
ID 703213
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s69c7fkr