Caption: Humans learned to thrive in a variety of African environments before their successful expansion into Eurasia roughly 50,000 years ago. Photo credit: Ondrej Pelanek and Martin Pelanek
Before the âOut of Africaâ migration that led humans into Eurasia and beyond, new research shows that humans expanded their niche to include African forests and deserts. The authors argue that human populations learning to adapt to new and challenging habitats was key to the long-term success of this dispersal.
Today, all non-Africans are known to have descended from a small group of people that ventured into Eurasia after around 50 thousand years ago. However, fossil evidence shows that there were numerous failed dispersals before this time that left no detectable traces in living people.
In a paper published in Nature this week, new evidence for the first time explains why those earlier migrations didnât succeed. A consortium of scientists led by Prof. Eleanor Scerri of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Germany and the Department of Classics & Archaeology at the University of Malta, as well as Prof. Andrea Manica of the University of Cambridge has found that before expanding into Eurasia 50 thousand years ago, humans began to exploit different habitat types in Africa in ways not seen before.
âWe assembled a dataset of archaeological sites and environmental information covering the last OPD thousand years in Africa. We used methods developed in ecology to understand changes in human environmental niches, the habitats humans can use and thrive in, during this time,â says Dr Emily Hallett of Loyola University Chicago, co-lead author of the study.
Photo credit: Ondrej Pelanek and Martin Pelanek
âOur results showed that the human niche began to expand significantly from 70 thousand years ago, and that this expansion was driven by humans increasing their use of diverse habitat types, from forests to arid deserts,â adds Dr Michela Leonardi of Londonâs Natural History Museum, the studyâs other lead author.
âThis is a key result.â explains Professor Manica, âPrevious dispersals seem to have happened during particularly favourable windows of increased rainfall in the Saharo-Arabian desert belt, thus creating âgreen corridorsâ for people to move into Eurasia. However, around 70,000 - 50,000 years ago, the easiest route out of Africa would have been more challenging than during previous periods, and yet this expansion was sizeable and ultimately successful.â
Here the researchers show that humans greatly increased the breadth of habitats they were able to exploit within Africa before the expansion out of the continent. This increase in the human niche may have been a result of a positive feedback of greater contact and cultural exchange, allowing larger ranges and the breakdown of geographic barriers.
Photo credit: Ondrej Pelanek and Martin Pelanek
âUnlike previous humans dispersing out of Africa, those human groups moving into Eurasia after ~60- 50 thousand years ago were equipped with a distinctive ecological flexibility as a result of coping with climatically challenging habitats,â says Prof. Scerri, âThis likely provided a key mechanism for the adaptive success of our species beyond their African homeland.â
The research was supported by funding from the Max Planck Society, European Research Council and Leverhulme Trust.