A new study by Reich & al. looks in some detail at peoples who have inherited DNA from the Denisovans, a fossil group known from Siberia. Ancient DNA has been retrieved from these fossils, although unfortunately the fossils are otherwise too scant to tell us much about what Denisovans looked like (other than "humanlike").
Reich & al. posit a complex phylogeny wherein populations are often descended from multiple ancestral populations. Lets take a look at the clades posited in this study.
Operational Taxonomic Units
Yoruba.—An ethnicity from West Africa (Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, etc.) (Photo by Marc Trip.) |
Han.—The most populous Chinese ethnicity. (Photo by Brian Yap.) |
Mamanwa.—One of the "Lumad" ("indigenous") ethnicities of the southern Philippines. (Photo by Richard Parker.) |
Jehai.—One of the Orang Asli ("original people") groups of Malaysia. Note: this photo is of a woman from a different Orang Asli tribe, the Batik. (Photo by Wazari Wazir.) |
Onge.—A group of Andaman Islanders, from the Bay of Bengal. (Photo from The Andamanese, by George Weber.) |
Australians.—The indigenous ("aboriginal") peoples of Australia. (Photo by Rusty Stewart.) |
Papuans.—The indigenous peoples of the New Guinean highlands. (Photo owned by the Center for International Forestry Research.) |
Neandertals.—An extinct group of robust near-human peoples from West Eurasia. (Photo by myself, of a sculpture by John Gurche.) |
Phylogeny
Reich & al. postulated the simplest phylogeny that could possibly explain their data. (Note that the actuality is likely more complex than this, but it's a good starting point.) More recent groups are to the right, and the thickness of the lines indicates the percentage of DNA contributed from population to population.
My diagram, not theirs. Any inaccuracies are my own. Free for reuse under Public Domain. |
I've added a line for the Denisovans' mitochondrial (motherline) ancestor, even though it's not part of the paper's phylogeny. More on that as we start looking through the various clades.
For looking at the clades I'll use a different diagram that does not reflect percentage of ancestry, but simply shows direct descent as unweighted arcs connecting parent and child taxonomic units.
Phylogeny of human and near-human populations according to Reich & al. 2011. Created using Names on Nodes. Free for reuse under Public Domain. |