tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post9041426020318550900..comments2023-05-15T07:11:30.874+02:00Comments on Leherensuge: Novel mtDNA M sublineage found in MadagascarMajuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comBlogger47125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-62486865536304007042010-01-03T22:25:41.455+01:002010-01-03T22:25:41.455+01:00Just a baseless speculation, IMO.
Of course it&#...Just a baseless speculation, IMO. <br /><br /><i>Of course it's impossible to define exactly where the line should be drawn</i>...<br /><br />Why? All that can be tested in fruit flies, mice, arabidopsis, etc. Mice specially are a very good reference for humans. <br /><br />It is possible.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-67980119396634103822010-01-03T22:02:56.747+01:002010-01-03T22:02:56.747+01:00"However no positive explanation has been off..."However no positive explanation has been offered for that improved productivity either". <br /><br />Most practical geneticists would say it's because disadvantageous recessive genes have more chance of being offset by dominant ones. <br /><br />"But it says absolutely nothing about the outbreeding depression starting there". <br /><br />If individuals closer than 3 or4 generations are less productive of offspring and those more than 3 or 4 generations apart are less productive surely maximum heterosis is achieved at 3 or 4 generations. Anything closer is inbreeding depression and anything further is outbreeding depression. Of course it's impossible to define exactly where the line should be drawn because it depends on exactly which genes combine in each particular case. And the fading off of inbreeding or outbreeding depression is extremely gradual.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-66451252526603503472010-01-03T10:57:48.316+01:002010-01-03T10:57:48.316+01:00No. That's extreme.
That's true inbreedin...<i>No. That's extreme</i>.<br /><br />That's true inbreeding and not whatever you're talking about that rather would be close to the seemingly optimal of 3rd-4th degree cousins. <br /><br /><i>I remember the paper about 3rd and 4th cousins. It indicates that outbreeding depression may begin at that level</i>.<br /><br />Actually indicates that the concept of inbreeding can only be applied to quite closer relationships and/or the systematic repetition of such close-relation breeding, as in the case of poor King Charles. This is not likely to happen in any human population, even if small. <br /><br />So quit babbling "inbreeding" once and again!<br /><br /><i>According to Dr. Bruce Buehler, director of HBM Genetics at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, the chances of married siblings passing down an unfavorable recessive gene is one in 16, while, for first cousins, the chances are one in 64.<br /><br />"At least genetically, this information doesn't suggest that second or third cousins would be at any higher risk for passing down unfavorable traits," Buehler said</i>. <br /><br />However no positive explanation has been offered for that improved productivity either. As Buehler suggests, it may be more at the psycho-emotional level where this extra productivity is generated. This might be in fact checked in the lab by controlled insemination of, say, mice but suppressing the emotional bond aspect (if such thing exists in mice couples, what I doubt). <br /><br />But it says absolutely nothing about the outbreeding depression starting there. Nothing at all suggests that.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-55325977037364275712010-01-03T10:12:15.451+01:002010-01-03T10:12:15.451+01:00"But I think your use and abuse of terms like..."But I think your use and abuse of terms like 'inbreeding' is unjustified". <br /><br />No. I use the term to mean your 'terms such as founder effect and homogenization', both of which are inadequate to explain the process. Founder effect is not necessarily inbreeding, unless the founder population is already inbred. Homogenization is closer but doesn't imply any limitation in population size, so is less effective in establishing new recessive genetic combinations. <br /><br />"Inbred in the sense you mean was Charles II of Spain" <br /><br />No. That's extreme. Offspring survival is compromised in such situations so it's too extreme for establishing recessive gene combinations. <br /><br />I remember the paper about 3rd and 4th cousins. It indicates that outbreeding depression may begin at that level. In fact I remember making a comment to that effect in the blog concerned.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-78740165109272859802010-01-03T10:01:27.217+01:002010-01-03T10:01:27.217+01:00Can't find your first link but the other two c...Can't find your first link but the other two could just as easily be indigenous North Americans. Like I say, Austronesians are a mix of various groups and not paricularly distinctive.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-78441755666571998772010-01-03T09:51:16.070+01:002010-01-03T09:51:16.070+01:00"So what do you think 'regular Austronesi..."So what do you think 'regular Austronesians' look like?"<br /><br />Like <a href="So" rel="nofollow">this guy</a>, for instance (a Taiwanese aborigine). Or like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Formosans.jpg" rel="nofollow">these guys</a>, who look so typically Polynesian (but are Taiwanese). Or like <a href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/02/Atayal.jpg" rel="nofollow">this woman</a> (again a Taiwanese). <br /><br />"As I've pointed out elsewhere the east Asian phenotype is invasive to the region south of Taiwan, and probably so for regions considerably to the north of that island". <br /><br />I may admit the first part rather reluctantly but I cannot admit the latter. It's mostly speculation. <br /><br />Genetics don't seem to support that. <br /><br />"Spencer Wells collected DNA samples from them more than a year ago but is yet to publish anything. I assume he did the research for National Geographic but I suspect something he found didn't turn out the way he expected". <br /><br />So your reference for all that is Austronesian and Wallacean is a cheater? Hmmm...<br /><br />"Deserted islands would certainly explain their rapid expansion south from Taiwan, and is certainly so for their expansion beyond the Northern Solomons". <br /><br />First, the expansion south of Taiwan was not initially "rapid". Second, islands populated only by low density hunter-gatherers would be virtually the same thing.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-87303716379221917692010-01-03T09:40:42.698+01:002010-01-03T09:40:42.698+01:00But that would still only work if it resulted in i...<i>But that would still only work if it resulted in inbreeding</i>.<br /><br />Whatever. I don't make much of an issue with this inbreeding matter. Most if not all species are the result of some degree of "inbreeding", it just depends what you want to emphasize. <br /><br />I use terms such as founder effect and homogenization, which is similar to your "inbreeding" concept but does not hold negative eugenic connotations that may well be misleading and aprioristic. Some "inbreeding" is just normal in any population: people have always married within the tribe, the caste, the class, the village, the valley... at least much more often than outside these circles. So yes, population tend to become somewhat homogeneous because of that. <br /><br />But I think your use and abuse of terms like "inbreeding" is unjustified. Inbred in the sense you mean was Charles II of Spain, but look at his <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Carlos_segundo80.png" rel="nofollow">family tree</a>!<br /><br />Reading on the concept of inbreeding, I have found this article that claims that <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/Health/ReproductiveHealth/story?id=4258128&page=1" rel="nofollow">some genetic affinity</a> (3rd or 4th degree cousins) is favorable, rather than negative. <br /><br />Instead there's also a concept called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outbreeding_depression" rel="nofollow">outbreeding depression</a>, that implies that too unrelated couples are not necessarily good. This probably affected all Sapiens-Neanderthal offspring that existed. <br /><br />But as you are the expert of inbreeding and outbreeding, you should be the one teaching me about these issues, not the opposite.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-7018958754542847502010-01-03T09:19:57.960+01:002010-01-03T09:19:57.960+01:00"Founder effect".
But that would stil..."Founder effect". <br /><br />But that would still only work if it resulted in inbreeding. So we're back with inbreeding. Recessive genes can only be expressed if an individual has a double dose. Assuming the particular mutation has only happened once (a reasonable assumption I'm sure you'll agree) it can only be expressed once two individuals of common descent mate. Of course this may happen long after the mutation occurred. And we know from intensive study of dairy cattle that most mutations that actually give rise to genes give rise to recessive ones. This is just as well or most of us wouldn't survive. Any disadvantageous dominant mutation would prevent survival. <br /><br />"Or how do you explain the striking phenotype differences between Negritos and regular Austronesians?" <br /><br />So what do you think 'regular Austronesians' look like? Austronesian-speaking people have always been very mixed, right from their origin. As I've pointed out elsewhere the east Asian phenotype is invasive to the region south of Taiwan, and probably so for regions considerably to the north of that island. <br /><br />"Philippines' Negritos are maybe the only major Eurasian branch still ill-researched genetically)" <br /><br />Spencer Wells collected DNA samples from them more than a year ago but is yet to publish anything. I assume he did the research for National Geographic but I suspect something he found didn't turn out the way he expected. <br /><br />"It doesn't really matter, does it?" <br /><br />Deserted islands would certainly explain their rapid expansion south from Taiwan, and is certainly so for their expansion beyond the Northern Solomons.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-56815154902512546082010-01-01T06:17:54.030+01:002010-01-01T06:17:54.030+01:00Anyhow, the last link you provided, Terry, is rath...Anyhow, the last link you provided, Terry, is rather informative, thanks (had not read on Toalean before nor was aware of sites dated to c. 40 Kya in Timor either). But I don't see how can you argue against Negritoid populations being widespread in nearly all islands with such archaeological continuity and so much "island hopping" being involved. <br /><br />This doesn't mean that Austronesian farmers and advanced seafarers would not be able to displace them (or absorb them) with relative ease when they arrived. <br /><br />Whatever the case, I see no point on your insistence on such "desert islands". It doesn't really matter, does it?Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-65313418913170635212010-01-01T05:56:21.540+01:002010-01-01T05:56:21.540+01:00So what would be your explanation for how it's...<i>So what would be your explanation for how it's possible that recessive mutations can become established phenotypically within a population?</i>-<br /><br />Founder effect. <br /><br /><i>You're a very brave man, Maju. Not many would claim so dogmatically that the Negritos in the Philippines are definitely pre-Austronesian. They speak Austronesian languages, although certainly there is a possibilty the language was adopted by a pre-existing population</i>.<br /><br />I understand that not just many but EVERYBODY claims that. Maybe you are the exception.<br /><br />Or how do you explain the striking phenotype differences between Negritos and regular Austronesians? Sure, Australian Aboriginals now speak English... but they don't come from England. <br /><br /><i>... leaves open the possibility that these Negritos were actually the first Austronesian-speaking people to enter Wallacea</i>. <br /><br />This suggestion lacks absolutely any merit, I am not going to waste any energies discussing it. <br /><br /><i>Certainly the eastward-moving Austronesians were not as East Asian-looking as are present day Filipinos</i>.<br /><br />It has been demonstrated that they are mixed with Melanesians (and Negritos maybe? - Philippines' Negritos are maybe the only major Eurasian branch still ill-researched genetically) and have founder effects (or "inbreeding", as you like to call it) of their own. Just what any normal person would expect. What else?Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-15363192123051336742010-01-01T04:08:44.549+01:002010-01-01T04:08:44.549+01:00"Again with your 'inbreeding' hypothe..."Again with your 'inbreeding' hypothesis for everything!" <br /><br />So what would be your explanation for how it's possible that recessive mutations can become established phenotypically within a population? Or do you maintain that such never happens? All genes present in all species today were present in God's original creation? Unfortunately the dual role of inbreeding and hybrid vigour in evolution is ignored by many, leading to a huge lack of understanding of the process. <br /><br />"Of course: several Negrito groups". <br /><br />You're a very brave man, Maju. Not many would claim so dogmatically that the Negritos in the Philippines are definitely pre-Austronesian. They speak Austronesian languages, although certainly there is a possibilty the language was adopted by a pre-existing population. <br /><br />"The Negritos of the Philippines are comprised of approximately twenty-five widely scattered ethnolinguistic groups totaling an estimated 15,000 people. They are located on several major islands in the country: Luzon, Palawan, Panay, Negros, Cebu, and Mindanao". <br /><br />(From this (not very good) link: <br /><br />http://www.everyculture.com/East-Southeast-Asia/Philippine-Negritos.html<br /><br />Note, major islands. The big ones. That still leaves many islands uninhabited when Austronesians first moved in, and leaves open the possibility that these Negritos were actually the first Austronesian-speaking people to enter Wallacea. Certainly the eastward-moving Austronesians were not as East Asian-looking as are present day Filipinos. <br /><br />Here's a link that deals with pre-Austronesian Wallacea. Its focus is actually on the Andamans but it's very useful: <br /><br />http://www.andaman.org/BOOK/chapter25/text25.htmterrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-49122529817315383882009-12-30T07:15:11.561+01:002009-12-30T07:15:11.561+01:00I think both Wallacea and near-New Guinea Melanesi...I think both Wallacea and near-New Guinea Melanesia were inhabited.<br /><br /><i>The key to the situation would be the Philippines. Do some surviving groups there predate the Austronesians?</i>-<br /><br />Of course: several Negrito groups. <br /><br />I understand that all what is now the Malay Archipelago was inhabited when Austronesians arrived. Maybe a few small islands were not but that would be about it. <br /><br />By the time that Austronesians are normally accepted to have reached Madagascar, there was already an array of their kingdoms in Indonesia. See: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Srivijaya" rel="nofollow">Srivijaya</a>.<br /><br />So they rather got involved in the Indian Ocean trade routes beginning from there. <br /><br /><i>But extinctions were slow. Because they comprised a relatively small inbred group</i>...<br /><br />Again with your "inbreeding" hypothesis for everything! They were not inbred: they have even now many different lineages. <br /><br /><i>This has given rise to the paradoxical situation of African groups occupying coastal regions and the sea-going Austronesians the interior</i>.<br /><br />Not exactly. The interior plateau was more suitable for agriculture, less strictly tropical. Austronesians were everywhere... just that in the interior they got less mixed with African natives. Anyhow Merina, the plateau realm, did not become really important until one or two centuries ago.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-8318549670690321352009-12-30T03:23:10.569+01:002009-12-30T03:23:10.569+01:00For what it's worth here is my summary of what...For what it's worth here is my summary of what we've learned. <br /><br />I actually disagree with the statement in the article that the Melanesian Islands were the first uninhabited islands the Austronesians had reached. I strongly suspect that many islands in Wallacea and the South China Sea had become isolated and uninhabited with the rising sea level of 10Kya. <br /><br />The key to the situation would be the Philippines. Do some surviving groups there predate the Austronesians? That's why I'm so interested in Spencer Wells' recent work there. He is yet to publish for some reason or other. <br /><br />We can be sure that at least some of the islands south of Taiwan were unoccupied, with plenty of resources for the first human arrivals, or re-arrivals. We know that by 1500 BC Austronesian-speaking people had developed boating technology capable of bypassing the already occupied islands of New Guinea/Northern Melanesia and moving into the wide open seas beyond. To reach Fiji, Tonga and Samoa by 1000 BC; 3000 years ago. They were held up there for another thousand years though, over which period they became the proto-Polynesians. <br /><br />To the west, on the other hand, Austronesians-speaking people had been able to enter uninhabited islands around Borneo and Java, from where they set off looking for more of them. The Andamans were already occupied so they bypassed them. <br /><br />Once the Austronesians had reached Sri Lanka they were able to join the long-established trade routes in the Arabian Sea. In return they presumably did quite well transfering goods between Sri Lanka and Indonesia, even adopting some Buddhist words evidently. By the time of the early Roman Empire the Arabian Sea trading routes had extended well down the East African coast. But evidently not to Madagascar. The Austronesians were able to take advantage of that situation, and carry on their tradition of preferentially moving into unoccupied islands. <br /><br />But extinctions were slow. Because they comprised a relatively small inbred group, they were unable to rapidly attain the island's human carrying capacity. This was not possible until some East Africans had adopted elements of the Austronesian boating technology and crossed to the island, mixing with the first arrivals. This has given rise to the paradoxical situation of African groups occupying coastal regions and the sea-going Austronesians the interior.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-55441853880700313952009-12-24T13:00:08.117+01:002009-12-24T13:00:08.117+01:00Ok. You have persuaded me. The paper by Vérin and ...Ok. You have persuaded me. The paper by Vérin and Wright is very conclusive and more to the substance than the one discussed in the post.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-79572378420811610282009-12-24T09:38:06.226+01:002009-12-24T09:38:06.226+01:00By the way:
"Proto-Malagassies arrived to M...By the way: <br /><br />"Proto-Malagassies arrived to Madagascar with rice and they have built their culture upon it". <br /><br />Austronesian-speaking people certainly did not take rice into Melanesia. However what they did take was the agriculture the people in New Guinea and Northern Melanesia already possessed. In fact it is virtually certain the Austronesian-speaking people who moved further into the Pacific were a mixture. As probably were the people who first arrived in Madagascar according to this article, which I'm sure you'll find interesting: <br /><br />http://ejournal.anu.edu.au/index.php/bippa/article/viewFile/662/641terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-80642707359553264772009-12-24T08:29:53.749+01:002009-12-24T08:29:53.749+01:00Maju:
"Where does it say 'iron tools...Maju: <br /><br />"Where does it say 'iron tools'? It says 'cutmarks'". <br /><br />The Paper: <br /><br />"Hippopotamus bones with cut-marks and evidence of human processing from iron tools have been found in the Mikea Forest, in Madagascar’s Southwest, dating to ~2 kyr [21]". <br /><br />Maju: <br /><br />"I understand that the paper discussed here does: that hunter-gatherers appear to have colonized Madagascar from mainland SE Africa c. 2000 BCE" <br /><br />The Paper: <br /><br />"Multiple lines of evidence point to the earliest human presence at ca. 2300 14C yr BP (350 cal yr BC)". <br /><br />Maju: <br /><br />"Even if related, these were already two different peoples". <br /><br />Me: <br /><br />They were the same people until about 1500 BC. They spread originally from the islands in Wallacea, including the Philippines. <br /><br />From Wikipedia: <br /><br />"The Austronesian peoples of Maritime Southeast Asia sailed eastward, and spread to the islands of Melanesia and Micronesia between 1200 B.C. and 500 A.D. respectively. The Austronesian inhabitants that spread westward through Maritime Southeast Asia had reached some parts of mainland Southeast Asia, and later on Madagascar".terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-89281144850210904792009-12-23T23:35:03.259+01:002009-12-23T23:35:03.259+01:00And no-one, other than you, has even mentioned suc...<i>And no-one, other than you, has even mentioned such a possibility</i>.<br /><br />I understand that the paper discussed here does: that hunter-gatherers appear to have colonized Madagascar from mainland SE Africa c. 2000 BCE (the Mikea would be their direct descendants, although somewhat mixed with Austronesian blood). <br /><br /><i>Do you really believe people in Madagascar were cutting up hippopotami with iron tools 4000 years ago?</i> -<br /><br />No. With stone tools. Where does it say "iron tools"? It says "cutmarks".<br /><br /><i>And they reached many isolated islands in the Pacific less than a thousand years ago</i>.<br /><br />Even if related, these were already two different peoples: Malays in Madagascar (and nowhere else) and Polynesians in Oceania (but not in the Indian Ocean). Two related but distinct processes.<br /><br /><i>True, but there are plenty of M lines in SE Asia</i>.<br /><br />I know but this one has not been detected. Nor elsewhere that matters, true.<br /><br /><i>And the Mikea, too, were almost certainly originally Malays</i>...<br /><br />No. They should not have reverted to hunter-gatherers, plus there is the datum of hippopotamus cutmarks in their area precisely. <br /><br /><i>It's only once those resources become severely depleted that they are forced into farming</i>.<br /><br />A fantasy generalization with no evidence. Proto-Malagassies arrived to Madagascar with rice and they have built their culture upon it. Would they done as you think, then they would have grown shorgum or whatever of the local African crops, not rice.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-51663701737474370862009-12-23T23:15:17.062+01:002009-12-23T23:15:17.062+01:00"There's no way Austronesians could have ..."There's no way Austronesians could have reached Madagascar or any remote island as early as 2000 BCE". <br /><br />And no-one, other than you, has even mentioned such a possibility. Certainly none of the papers we've discussed here claim it, and neither do I. And it should even be obvious, even to you, that the authors are not claiming such a date. Do you really believe people in Madagascar were cutting up hippopotami with iron tools 4000 years ago? Two thousand years ago is more likely. And that date has been accepted for about forty years now and is confirmed by the paper you presented. You can make things up if you like but you certainly won't convince me. Or, probably, anyone else here either. <br /><br />"Even if they specialized in islands, they never settled any other island in the Indian Ocean". <br /><br />They specialized in unoccupied islands. But of those, of course only the ones they happened to discover. They didn't have maps you know. The evidence is overwhelming that they were the first to discover Madagascar although, as you point out, they missed many small, isolated islands in the Indian Ocean. And they reached many isolated islands in the Pacific less than a thousand years ago. <br /><br />"In theory, Malay colonists could anyhow have picked the lineage anywhere in their route (South, West Asia, East Africa)". <br /><br />True, but there are plenty of M lines in SE Asia. In fact I remember recently a diagram that showed an M lineage (I forget which one, but I think perhaps related to an Andaman one) that seems to have expanded through the Indian state of Orissa from the coast. <br /><br />"Malagassy hunter-gatherer instead means Mikea". <br /><br />And the Mikea, too, were almost certainly originally Malays, although with later admixture with Africans. When people first arrive in any region with plenty of easlily available resources what incentive would they have to remain farmers? It's only once those resources become severely depleted that they are forced into farming.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-31532870415056893862009-12-23T12:40:24.055+01:002009-12-23T12:40:24.055+01:00What does -2000 (in years) might mean even out of ...What does -2000 (in years) might mean even out of context? 2000 BCE, obviously. I used to work with such negative numbers for long until I realized that most people did not style negative years and changed my style to adapt. <br /><br />I have on the contrary never seen -2000 to mean "before present", sorry. It's always before Octavius or that fool they nailed to a plank in Plestine: BCE. <br /><br /><i>And by the Austronesians were easily capable of reaching Madagascar</i>. <br /><br />There's no way Austronesians could have reached Madagascar or any remote island as early as 2000 BCE. And it's not the kind of evidence we would expect either. <br /><br />Plus being able is not the same as reaching it in fact. Austronesians never colonized the nearby islands of Mascaregnes or Seychelles. They never settled Maldivas or Japan or Australia... they reached to where they did in fact (a host of unpredictable random sum of individual and little groups' decisions) not where they were merely technically capable to reach.<br /><br />Austronesians did not colonize most of the world. Even if they specialized in islands, they never settled any other island in the Indian Ocean. <br /><br />Being able to is not the same as doig it. I'm able to go down for bread but I'm not doing it right now, maybe later, maybe I'll pass and call up the Chinese food delivery service again. <br /><br /><i>Although they do admit it's more likely to come from SE Asia</i>.<br /><br />Looks like but would need to be confirmed by finding at least related lineages in the Malay archipelago. In theory, Malay colonists could anyhow have picked the lineage anywhere in their route (South, West Asia, East Africa). <br /><br /><i>The only thing I've been able to find so far regarding Madagascar pottery from between the 4th to the 8th centuries AD is that it's not African. It could come from Arabia, India or Sri Lanka as much as from SE Asia</i>.<br /><br />Good enough: it's Malagassy farmer, what means Malay. Malagassy hunter-gatherer instead means Mikea.Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-82584498320383547502009-12-23T03:01:07.031+01:002009-12-23T03:01:07.031+01:00"For me it's clear but if you don't w..."For me it's clear but if you don't want to admit it, it's your problem". <br /><br />For me it means exactly what it says, very clear. It's you who have the problem. I'm sure that 'when the paper is corrected for publication' it will read exactly the same. <br /><br />"Anyhow it's not too important because the jump to open ocean only happened much later in the last milennium BCE or the first milennium CE". <br /><br />And by the Austronesians were easily capable of reaching Madagascar. <br /><br />"If you think it's invalid in this particular case, present your counter-evidence please". <br /><br />I actually agree with it. It fits exactly with what I've said. By 1500 BC Austronesians were very adept sailors and by 2000 years ago they could easily reach Madagascar. <br /><br />"However it is interesting to know from it that some groups are believed to be pre-Austronesian colonists and that they were hunter-gatherers, hence also pre-Bantu (non-Bantu at least)". <br /><br />And the authors base that belief on mythology and the possibility that M16 branches off very early during OoA, and may even come from Africa. Although they do admit it's more likely to come from SE Asia. <br /><br />"As for pottery I understand it clearly refers to the Austronesian arrival" <br /><br />The only thing I've been able to find so far regarding Madagascar pottery from between the 4th to the 8th centuries AD is that it's not African. It could come from Arabia, India or Sri Lanka as much as from SE Asia.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-74153855791000494582009-12-22T22:22:31.535+01:002009-12-22T22:22:31.535+01:00Ok, you're right with the last thing. The expa...Ok, you're right with the last thing. The expansion (from Taiwan to Philippines) could have begun as early as 5000 BCE maybe but also as late as 2500 BCE. Anyhow it's not too important because the jump to open ocean only happened much later in the last milennium BCE or the first milennium CE. It's virtually irrelevant when they crossed into Philippines for what we are discussing here. <br /><br /><i>No it doesn't. It means what it says</i>.<br /><br />Whatever. Remind me to check when the paper is corrected for publication. For me it's clear but if you don't want to admit it, it's your problem.<br /><br /><i>How many times have you criticised others for using Wiki as a reference?</i> - <br /><br />Not for doing it. Just criticized the reference when it was wrong. Wikipedia is not always right but it's a quick reference. If you think it's invalid in this particular case, present your counter-evidence please. <br /><br />As for pottery I understand it clearly refers to the Austronesian arrival, as the dates are at least similar in all the texts I have ever read on the subject: Iron Age, CE dates. Anyhow this paper only makes an overview of the archaeological context and fails also to analyze the African DNA - it's just focused on their discovery of M16.<br /><br />However it is interesting to know from it that some groups are believed to be pre-Austronesian colonists and that they were hunter-gatherers, hence also pre-Bantu (non-Bantu at least).Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-81425437968006623242009-12-22T21:51:09.371+01:002009-12-22T21:51:09.371+01:00Earlier I wrote, 'What? The Austronesian expan...Earlier I wrote, 'What? The Austronesian expansion from Taiwan began at least 5000 years ago...' <br /><br />You replied, 'That's not what Wikipedia says'. But the first sentence in Wiki is: <br /><br />"According to mainstream Western studies, a large-scale Austronesian expansion began around 5000-2500 B.C." <br /><br />So what's the difference between what I wrote and what Wiki says? Your lack of reading skills shows up yet again.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-27321890197473539112009-12-22T21:46:07.835+01:002009-12-22T21:46:07.835+01:00"The Austronesian peoples of Maritime Southea..."The Austronesian peoples of Maritime Southeast Asia sailed eastward, and spread to the islands of Melanesia and Micronesia between 1200 B.C. and 500 A.D. respectively". <br /><br />So their sailing technology was sufficient to reach the previously unoccupied islands of Melanesia by 1200 B.C. Easily sufficient to reach Madagascar, in the other direction, along the coast by 300 B.C.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-3766170703156008332009-12-22T21:42:41.027+01:002009-12-22T21:42:41.027+01:00"From context, I conclude that '-2 kyr..."From context, I conclude that '-2 kyr' means 2000 BCE". <br /><br />No it doesn't. It means what it says. <br /><br />"Later archaeological sites, now containing pottery, have been variously dated from the 4th to the 8th centuries AD". <br /><br />So pottery appears later, but I can't find any reference as to its being related to SE Asian pottery or to African. So the author's conclusion, 'Therefore, the island seems to have been visited at least intermittently by Africans prior to the arrival of Austronesian-speaking maritime travellers from Island Southeast Asia sometime around the 7th or 8th centuries AD' is completely unjustified. If they'd 'visited at least intermittently' surely they'd have stayed and multiplied. Such a productive environment would surely lead eventually to a population explosion, as has everywhere else. Madagascar would now be predominantly African. Besides which intermittent visiting implies a sophisticated boating technology. What happened to it? <br /><br />"And Malagassys are much more directly related to Malayo-Indonesians, seemingly to the ones from Borneo". <br /><br />But that doesn't mean at all they took pottery with them. Pottery obviously died out as the Austronesians crossed the Pacific too. <br /><br />"That's not what Wikipedia says" <br /><br />How many times have you criticised others for using Wiki as a reference? Anyway: <br /><br />"The colonization of Madagascar is dated in this article to 200 CE" <br /><br />That's reasonably close to 'Hippopotamus bones with cut-marks and evidence of human processing from iron tools have been found in the Mikea Forest, in Madagascar’s Southwest, dating to ~2 kyr'. <br /><br />I'm not so sure about the iron tools, unless they picked them up along the route to Madagascar. From Wiki: <br /><br />"a large-scale Austronesian expansion began around 5000-2500 B.C." <br /><br />And: <br /><br />"Over the next thousand years, Austronesian peoples migrated southeast to the rest of the Philippine Islands, and into the islands of the Celebes Sea, Borneo, and Indonesia". <br /><br />That takes us to 1500 BC at the latest. The remainder of Wiki deals only with the eastward expansion. We can presume the westward one began about the same time, or shortly afterwards. After all, they could follow the coast for much of the journey west whereas they were usually sailing blind to the east. <br /><br />I strongly suspect the reason that you are so committed to an early African presence on Madagascar is that you have trouble reconciling a crossing of the Bab Al Mandab in boats more than 50,000 years ago with an apparent lack of any further development of offshore boating in Africa for such a long time afterwards. I'm sorry. You'll have to live with it.terrythttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17327062321100035888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3563811638411839784.post-39369613739491028032009-12-22T20:45:28.512+01:002009-12-22T20:45:28.512+01:00And these first arrivals were Austronesians. Afric...<i>And these first arrivals were Austronesians. Africans arrived later. How else is it possible to interpret the statements?</i><br /><br />The way I do. <br /><br /><i>The NZ Maori had neither pottery nor steel</i>.<br /><br />Not all Austronesians are Maori. And Malagassys are much more directly related to Malayo-Indonesians, seemingly to the ones from Borneo. <br /><br /><i>What? The Austronesian expansion from Taiwan began at least 5000 years ago</i>...<br /><br />That's not what Wikipedia says:<br /><br />"According to mainstream Western studies, a large-scale Austronesian expansion began around 5000-2500 B.C. Population growth primarily fueled this migration. These first settlers may have landed in northern Luzon (...) Over the next thousand years, Austronesian peoples migrated southeast to the rest of the Philippine Islands, and into the islands of the Celebes Sea, Borneo, and Indonesia. The Austronesian peoples of Maritime Southeast Asia sailed eastward, and spread to the islands of Melanesia and Micronesia between 1200 B.C. and 500 A.D. respectively. <br /><br />"(...) They had settled Easter Island by 300 A.D., Hawaii by 400 A.D., and into New Zealand by 800 A.D. In the Indian Ocean they sailed west from Maritime Southeast Asia; the Austronesian peoples reached Madagascar by 200 A.D.". <br /><br />Most of the expansion happened, as you can read in CE (AD) times. Only the core expansion into Philippines and nearby islands is from earlier dates. <br /><br />The colonization of Madagascar is dated in this article to 200 CE (while the paper dates it even later, at c. 700 CE).Majuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12369840391933337204noreply@blogger.com