Annual Reviews tagline graphic
  Hello. Sign in to get personalized recommendations. New user? Register now.
 
Home Order Browse Search Profile Help Contact Us
Abstract
Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics
Vol. 1: 361-385 (Volume publication date September 2000)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.genom.1.1.361)
GENETIC PERSPECTIVES ON HUMAN ORIGINS AND DIFFERENTIATION

Henry Harpending and ­ Alan Rogers ­
Department of Anthropology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112

Abstract  This is a review of genetic evidence about the ancient demography of the ancestors of our species and about the genesis of worldwide human diversity. The issue of whether or not a population size bottleneck occurred among our ancestors is under debate among geneticists as well as among anthropologists. The bottleneck, if it occurred, would confirm the Garden of Eden (GOE) model of the origin of modern humans. The competing model, multiregional evolution (MRE), posits that the number of human ancestors has been large, occupying much of the temperate Old World for the last two million years. While several classes of genetic marker seem to contain a strong signal of demographic recovery from a small number of ancestors, other nuclear loci show no such signal. The pattern at these loci is compatible with the existence of widespread balancing selection in humans. The study of human diversity at (putatively) neutral genetic marker loci has been hampered since the beginning by ascertainment bias since they were discovered in Europeans. The high levels of polymorphism at microsatellite loci means that they are free of this bias. Microsatellites exhibit a clear almost linear diversity gradient away from Africa, so that New World populations are approximately 15% less diverse than African populations. This pattern is not compatible with a model of a single large population expansion and colonization of most of the Earth by our ancestors but suggests, instead, gradual loss of diversity in successive colonization bottlenecks as our species grew and spread.

Full TextPDF

Chain of Reviews: Annual Reviews chapters connected to this topic

Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)

Genetic bottleneck among daghestan highlanders migrating to lowlands
Central European Journal of Medicine 3(4):396-405 (2009)
How accurate is the current picture of human genetic variation?
Heredity (2008)
Morphological variation of major human populations based on nonmetric dental traits
American Journal of Physical Anthropology 136(2):169-182 (2008)
Allelic Variation and Haplotype Structure of the Dopamine Receptor Gene DRD2 in Nine Indian Populations
Genetic Testing 12(1):153-160 (2008)
New developments in the genetic evidence for modern human origins
Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 17(1):69-80 (2008)
 
Series Home > Table of Contents > Abstract

Prev. Article | Next Article
Full-text HTML
View/Print PDF (134.4 KB)
Add to Favorites
Email link to a friend

Add to CiteULike Add to Connotea Add to del.icio.us

Quick Links
 • RSS (Series Update Alert)
 • Chain of Reviews
 • Alert me when:
New articles cite this article
 • RSS (Citation Alert)
 • Download to citation manager
 • Related articles found in:
Annual Reviews
 • View Most Downloaded Reviews
 
 
Quick Search
for 
Authors:
Henry Harpending and
Alan Rogers
Keywords:
human origins
population expansion
race
Garden of Eden hypothesis
multiregional hypothesis

Users who read this review also read:

,
Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics. Volume 3, Page 129-152, Sep 2002
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (212 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 
,
Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics. Volume 4, Page 293-340, Sep 2003
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (297 KB) | Add to Favorites | Related 

2008 Annual Reviews. All Rights Reserved.
  Technology Partner - Atypon Systems, Inc.