More secrets of Polynesia and the origins of the Polynesians revealed
From the BBC website. New research seems to suggest that the early Polynesians met with Indigenous South Americans, possibly in the South Marquesas islands around 1200 AD
Quote:
New evidence has been
found for epic prehistoric voyages between the Americas and eastern Polynesia.
DNA analysis suggests
there was mixing between Native Americans and Polynesians around AD 1200.
The extent of
potential contacts between the regions has been a hotly contested area for
decades.
In 1947, Norwegian
explorer Thor Heyerdahl made a journey by raft from South America to Polynesia
to demonstrate the voyage was possible.
Until now, proponents
of Native American and Polynesian interaction reasoned that some common
cultural elements, such as a similar word used for a common crop, hinted that
the two populations had mingled before Europeans settled in South America.
Opponents pointed to
studies with differing conclusions and the fact that the two groups were
separated by thousands of kilometres of open ocean.
Alexander Ioannidis
from Stanford University in California and his international colleagues
analysed genetic data from more than 800 living indigenous inhabitants of
coastal South America and French Polynesia.
They were looking for
snippets of DNA that are characteristic of each population and for segments
that are "identical by descent" - meaning they are inherited from the
same ancestor many generations ago.
"We found
identical-by-descent segments of Native American ancestry across several
Polynesian islands," said Mr Ioannidis.
"It was
conclusive evidence that there was a single shared contact event."
In other words,
Polynesians and Native Americans met at one point in history, and during that
time children with both Native American and Polynesian ancestry were born.
Statistical analyses
confirmed the event occurred around AD 1200, at about the time Pacific islands
were originally being settled by Polynesians.
The team were also
able to localise the source of the Native American DNA to indigenous groups in
modern-day Colombia.
Previous studies of
the genomes (the full complement of DNA in the nuclei of human cells) of people
from these regions have focused around contact on Easter Island - famous for
its giant stone faces - because it is the closest inhabited Polynesian island
to South America.
However, the study in Nature journal supports
the idea that first contact occurred on one of the archipelagos of eastern
Polynesia - as proposed by Heyerdahl.
Wind and current
simulations have shown that drift voyages departing from Ecuador and Colombia
are the most likely to reach Polynesia, and that they arrive with the highest
probability in the South Marquesas islands, followed by the Tuamotu
Archipelago.
Both of these
archipelagos lie at the heart of the region of islands where the researchers
found an ancestral genetic component from Colombian Native Americans.
Previously,
researchers had noted superficial similarities between monolithic statues in
Polynesia and others found in South America.
But other evidence
comes from a correspondence between the word for sweet potato (a crop that
originated in South America), which is "kumala" in Polynesia and
"cumal" in, for example, the language used by the Cañari people of
Ecuador.
Heyerdahl embarked on
his "Kon-Tiki" raft expedition from Callao, Peru, on 28 April 1947
with five companions. They sailed on the raft for 101 days, traversing 6,900km
(4,300 miles) of ocean before smashing into a reef at Raroia in the Tuamotus on
7 August 1947..
Unquote
The mysteries of Polynesia and the Polynesian people will continue to fascinate some anthropologists for years to come and as new scientific methods are developed more will be learned.
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