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  • Maybe it’s just me but I found this rather fascinating….

    Although present-day people carry a signature of the ancient split in their DNA, today’s Africans are part of a single population. The researchers compiled a “family tree” of different mitochondrial DNA groupings found in Africa. A major split occurred near the root of the tree as early as 150,000 years ago.

    On one side of this divide are the mitochondrial lineages now found predominantly in East and West Africa, and all maternal lineages found outside Africa.

    On the other side of the divide are lineages predominantly found in the Khoi and San (Khoisan) hunter-gatherer people of southern Africa.

    Many African populations today harbour a mixture of both.

    Read the full study at BBC


    About the Author: Jonathan Gosier (Founder) is an American-born software developer, writer and social entrepreneur. He currently lives in Kampala, Uganda where he is working on two fronts: to encourage western businesses and investors to engage African entrepreneurs and to encourage the adoption of computers, programming and use of the internet in the developing regions of Africa. He is a huge advocate for promoting the ways in which a semantic web will benefit emerging economies in the world.


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