Study: Ancient African exodus had more men

Published: Dec. 22, 2008 at 4:54 PM

BOSTON, Dec. 22 (UPI) -- Men and women who left Africa more than 60,000 years ago were not equal partners in their migration, researchers at Boston's Harvard University reported.

Tracing variations in the X chromosome and in the non-sex chromosomes, researchers found evidence that men likely outnumbered women in the exodus, the university said in a news release.

The scientists said their method of comparing X chromosomes with the other non-gender-specific chromosomes would provide a powerful tool for historical and anthropological studies because it can show differences in female and male populations that were inaccessible previously.

Even though their method can demonstrate a male-dominated migration, the Harvard researchers said they couldn't determine why more men than women participated.

But lead author Alon Keinan said the findings are "in line with what anthropologists have taught us about hunter-gatherer populations, in which short-distance migration is primarily by women and long-distance migration primarily by men."

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Police called to Black Friday mall brawls (2 min)
Heidi Kay Werstler: Claim your bottle (20 min)
'Undie' thieves target Victoria's Secret (41 min)
Herschel studying massive dying star
UPI NewsTrack Business
Black Friday shoppers numerous, cautious
Indian automaker Tata posts 3Q profit
fark
They took away radio traffic reporters' airplanes, and now they're taking away their radio too
The majority of working mothers say they would prefer to work part-time. Only 21 percent of working...
The world's tallest model stands at 7 feet tall. With 'you'd hit it if you were tall enough' pics...
Goth leather pagan robs bank, gives the money away, turns himself in. Ta-WTF?
U.S. journalist grilled at Canada border crossing because officials demanded to know what she would...
Today's perfectly cromulent headline brought to you by Australia: "World leaders spruik climate...