0:06
over the last two decades scientists
0:09
have made great progress in
0:10
understanding the origins of modern
0:12
humans research shows that anatomically
0:15
modern humans who were genetically and
0:17
physically like us first appeared in
0:19
Africa at least 300,000 years ago
0:22
however these humans began spreading to
0:24
other parts of the world around 65,000
0:26
years ago much later than their initial
0:29
appearance replacing older human species
0:31
like Neanderthalss however two main
0:34
questions remain why did it take so long
0:36
for them to leave Africa and what
0:39
changes helped them succeed in new
0:40
environments the earliest known members
0:43
of the Homo sapiens caid exhibit
0:45
significant morphological diversity and
0:47
a broad geographic distribution fossils
0:50
from Jebel Earhode in Morocco dated to
0:53
approximately 300,000 years ago display
0:56
facial structures akin to modern humans
0:58
but possess elongated archaic brain
1:01
cases similarly the Floresbad skull from
1:04
South Africa dated to around 260,000
1:07
years ago has been interpreted as an
1:09
early representative of Homo sapiens
1:12
additionally remains from Omoish and
1:14
Herto in Ethiopia dating between 195,000
1:18
and 160,000 years ago exhibit a mix of
1:22
modern and archaic traits highlighting
1:24
the complex evolutionary journey of our
1:26
species this widespread fossil evidence
1:29
indicates that early Homo sapiens
1:31
populations were not confined to a
1:33
single region but were dispersed
1:35
throughout the continent each exhibiting
1:37
unique anatomical features the African
1:40
archaeological record reveals regionally
1:42
distinct material cultures during the
1:45
pleaene suggesting independent
1:47
technological and cultural developments
1:49
among semiisolated populations for
1:52
instance middle stone age artifacts
1:54
associated with early homo sapiens have
1:57
been found across various African sites
1:59
reflecting diverse adaptations to local
2:01
environments genetic studies indicate
2:04
that the deep population structure
2:06
observed in present-day African
2:08
populations extends back tens of
2:10
thousands of years this genetic
2:12
diversity parallels paleo environmental
2:14
records of shifting and fragmented
2:17
habitable zones supporting the notion of
2:19
long-standing regionally distinct
2:22
populations that occasionally interbred
2:25
the discovery of other hominin species
2:27
such as homonyiti in South Africa dating
2:31
335,000 and 236,000 years ago suggests
2:36
that multiple hominin species coexisted
2:38
with early homo sapiens this raises the
2:40
possibility of interbreeding and genetic
2:42
exchange further complicating the
2:45
evolutionary landscape the analysis of
2:47
mitochondrial DNA patterns in
2:49
present-day African lineages points
2:52
strongly to an episode of rapid
2:54
population growth in the ancestral
2:56
African populations within the time
2:58
range from 60,000 to 80,000 years ago
3:02
around more than 200,000 years after the
3:05
inferred last common ancestor similar
3:08
patterns were seen in Asia around 60,000
3:10
years ago and in Europe about 40,000
3:13
years ago similar patterns were seen in
3:16
Asia around 60,000 years ago and in
3:18
Europe about 40,000 years ago this
3:21
suggests Africa experienced population
3:23
expansion much earlier than the rest of
3:25
the world the evidence as a whole points
3:28
strongly to a major and apparently rapid
3:30
increase in African population numbers
3:32
much earlier than that experienced in
3:34
either Asia or Europe and apparently
3:36
involving expansion by means of a
3:38
demographic diffusion wave from a
3:41
relatively small population nucleus
3:44
probably confined to a fairly small
3:46
region of Africa to other parts of the
3:48
continent other studies focused on
3:51
specific African mitochondrial DNA
3:53
lineages particularly L2 and L3 these
3:57
lineages expanded rapidly between 80,000
4:00
and 60,000 years ago likely starting in
4:03
Eastern or Southern Africa and then
4:05
spreading across the continent reaching
4:07
Western Africa by at least 30,000 to
4:09
40,000 BP and perhaps across the mouth
4:12
of the Red Sea to the adjacent parts of
4:14
Southern Asia by 60,000 to 65,000 BP
4:18
while it's unclear whether this spread
4:20
was due to actual migration or just the
4:23
spread of genetic traits it points to a
4:25
significant event likely involving both
4:28
cultural and population changes that led
4:30
to the rapid growth and expansion of
4:32
modern humans from a small African
4:34
region the key question is what caused
4:37
the sudden growth in African populations
4:39
around 60,000 to 80,000 years ago to
4:42
understand this we turn to recent
4:44
archaeological findings especially from
4:47
southern Africa important discoveries
4:49
have been made at sites like Blomos cave
4:51
and clazes river on the southern coast
4:54
and bumplaus cave and deepcl further
4:57
inland these sites date to the middle
4:59
stone age which lasted from about
5:01
250,000 to 40,000 years ago and line up
5:05
with the middle paleolithic period in
5:07
Europe and Asia some specific layers in
5:10
these sites like the still bay and
5:12
howisonson's port levels date from
5:13
around 75,000 to 55,000 years ago these
5:18
layers show a big leap in technology and
5:20
culture compared to earlier African
5:22
middle stone age sites the tools and
5:24
artifacts found here are very similar to
5:26
what appeared much later in Europe and
5:28
Western Asia around 45,000 to 50,000
5:31
years ago during the so-called upper
5:34
paleolithic revolution the African sites
5:37
reveal advanced tool making techniques
5:39
like making sharp blades with soft
5:41
hammer methods and specialized tools for
5:44
working with skin bone and wood like end
5:47
scrapers and burns they also found
5:50
shaped bone tools likely used for spears
5:52
and needles small stone tips possibly
5:55
for arrows or spears and even personal
5:57
ornaments like perforated shells
6:00
importantly pieces of red ochre with
6:02
abstract designs were discovered at
6:04
Blombo's cave these are the oldest known
6:06
examples of symbolic or artistic
6:08
expression there's also evidence of
6:10
long-distance trade or movement with
6:12
highquality stone and shell beads being
6:15
transported over 20 to 30 km altogether
6:18
these findings show that humans in
6:20
southern Africa were developing advanced
6:22
cultural behaviors about 20,000 years
6:25
earlier than similar developments in
6:27
Europe this was a dynamic and creative
6:29
time in African prehistory marking a
6:31
major turning point in human development
6:34
the recent archaeological discoveries in
6:36
southern Africa help explain the
6:38
significant population growth seen
6:40
between 80,000 and 60,000 years ago as
6:43
suggested by genetic evidence although
6:46
the exact reasons for this expansion
6:48
remain unclear four key developments in
6:50
the archaeological record seem important
6:53
first tools from sites like Blombo's
6:55
Cave and Clazy's River suggest more
6:58
advanced hunting weapons such as bone
7:00
spearheads and multi-art tools which may
7:02
even have included early versions of
7:04
arrows even if archery wasn't yet in use
7:07
these innovations likely made hunting
7:09
more effective and increased food
7:11
availability second there is evidence
7:13
from Clay's River of burnt plant remains
7:15
including root crops like Watsonia some
7:18
researchers believe this might indicate
7:20
early attempts at managing plant food
7:22
resources possibly by burning vegetation
7:24
to boost crop yields if true this could
7:27
resemble early agricultural practices
7:30
though this idea is still speculative
7:32
third findings at Blombo's cave suggest
7:35
the systematic use of marine food
7:38
including fish and seabirds this shows
7:40
an expanded use of available food
7:42
sources fourth the presence of imported
7:45
materials like highquality stone and
7:47
decorative shells suggests trade or
7:50
exchange networks between groups these
7:52
networks could have helped people share
7:54
resources especially during times when
7:56
food was scarce all these innovations
7:59
may have increased the environment's
8:00
ability to support more people leading
8:02
to population growth even though the DNA
8:05
evidence has some uncertainty the timing
8:08
of these behavioral changes and
8:09
population expansion seems closely
8:12
linked importantly this doesn't mean
8:14
that the entire African population
8:16
increased at that time in fact some
8:18
regions likely experienced population
8:20
declines due to harsh dry climates
8:23
between 60,000 and 30,000 years ago
8:26
rather these innovations may have
8:28
allowed populations in southern Africa
8:30
to grow and spread into other regions
8:33
replacing or absorbing earlier human
8:35
groups with less advanced technology
8:37
trying to pinpoint the exact origin of
8:39
the behavioral changes and population
8:42
growth in early humans is difficult
8:45
because there is a lack of
8:46
welldocumented archaeological sites
8:48
across many regions of subsaharan Africa
8:52
especially in central and eastern Africa
8:54
this makes it risky to assume that South
8:56
Africa was the starting point just
8:58
because its sites are currently the most
9:00
wellstudied in fact similar technologies
9:03
to those found in South Africa like the
9:06
Howisonson's port tools have also been
9:08
found in other parts of Africa including
9:11
Tanzania and Kenya far to the north
9:14
however dating these sites accurately is
9:16
still a challenge so it's possible that
9:18
these advanced tool technologies and the
9:21
associated behaviors may have started
9:24
elsewhere in Africa before appearing in
9:26
South Africa regardless of where they
9:28
began the widespread of these
9:29
technologies suggests there may have
9:31
been a large movement or expansion of
9:33
populations across subsaharan Africa
9:36
between about 70,000 and 55,000 years
9:39
ago some researchers even suggest that
9:42
this new package of modern behaviors
9:44
reflected in technologies like Still Bay
9:46
and Howisonson's port played a key role
9:49
in humans spreading from southern Africa
9:51
into other parts of Africa and
9:53
eventually into Asia and Europe after
10:02
ago the big question remains what caused
10:05
these sudden changes in human behavior
10:07
around 80,000 to 70,000 years ago one
10:11
theory is that it was due to a major
10:13
leap in human brain development another
10:15
theory is that these changes were
10:17
responses to new environmental
10:19
challenges such as climate shifts
10:21
interestingly these environmental
10:23
changes happened around the same time as
10:25
the rapid rise in new technologies
10:27
social practices and communication
10:30
styles making this connection worth
10:32
exploring further even if we believe
10:34
that changes in behavior in southern
10:36
Africa were mostly responses to
10:38
environmental challenges we can't ignore
10:41
the evidence that some important shifts
10:42
in human thinking and behavior also
10:45
occurred around the time our species
10:46
emerged one key piece of evidence comes
10:49
from Northern Africa where anatomically
10:51
modern humans briefly spread into nearby
10:54
Southwest Asia between 177,000 to
10:58
194,000 and again between 110,000 and
11:02
90,000 years ago this is best shown by
11:05
skeletons found at the sites of Misla
11:07
School and Kofa in Israel the Misla 1
11:11
fossil found in Israel was dated to
11:13
around 177,000 to 194,000 years ago
11:19
using multiple scientific methods
11:21
including analysis of the tooth nearby
11:24
sediment and burned tools this finding
11:26
is significant because it may show one
11:28
of the earliest known migrations of Homo
11:30
sapiens out of Africa however we don't
11:33
yet know if early humans lived in this
11:35
region continuously or only during
11:37
certain climatefriendly periods evidence
11:40
suggests humid phases around 244,000 to
11:44
190,000 years ago may have allowed human
11:47
movement into the area though arid
11:48
periods likely made long-term settlement
11:50
difficult it's unlikely that the people
11:52
at Mizlia directly evolved into the
11:54
later populations at school in Cavs but
11:57
they might have spread further into
11:59
Eurasia and interacted with
12:00
Neanderthalss possibly sharing genes and
12:03
tools genetic studies suggest most gene
12:06
flow from Neanderthalss into modern
12:08
humans happened around 50,000 to 60,000
12:11
years ago though some earlier exchanges
12:14
may have occurred even before the Mislia
12:16
fossils time three features of these
12:18
sites are especially important first
12:20
some skeletons were buried in what
12:22
seemed to be ceremonial graves with
12:24
items like a deer antler and a boar's
12:27
jaw placed alongside the bodies second
12:29
the coughs site included pierced
12:31
seashells probably used as ornaments and
12:34
red ochre likely used as a pigment both
12:37
signs of symbolic behavior third despite
12:40
these signs of symbolic thought the
12:42
tools found with these remains were
12:44
still basic typical of the older middle
12:46
stone age and lacked the more advanced
12:49
technology seen in later African sites
12:51
like Blombos and Clazy's River this
12:54
suggests that even though these people
12:56
were anatomically modern and showed
12:58
symbolic behavior their technology had
13:00
not yet advanced it's also notable that
13:03
their movement into southwest Asia
13:05
didn't last long neanderthalss returned
13:07
to dominate the region about 70,000
13:09
years ago this could mean that the early
13:12
modern humans despite their cognitive
13:14
abilities lacked the technological and
13:16
social systems needed to compete with
13:18
the longestablished Neanderthalss
13:20
especially during the colder climate of
13:22
that period the development of modern
13:24
human behavior didn't happen all at once
13:27
it was a mosaic process meaning
13:29
different traits appeared at different
13:31
times symbolic behaviors like rituals
13:34
and art seem to have developed before
13:36
major advances in tools for example the
13:40
160,000year-old modern human skulls from
13:43
Herto in Ethiopia were found with
13:45
oldstyle tools but may show signs of
13:48
symbolic treatment like rituals this
13:51
raises questions about how and when
13:52
modern thinking and language evolved if
13:55
symbolism reflects modern thinking then
13:57
such abilities likely existed 100,000 to
14:01
150,000 years ago alongside anatomically
14:04
modern humans later advances in
14:07
technology economy and society could
14:10
simply be the result of gradually using
14:12
these new mental skills as people face
14:14
new challenges similar to how farming
14:17
societies later developed another idea
14:20
is that brain development didn't happen
14:22
all at once but through multiple genetic
14:24
changes over time some recent gene
14:26
studies like microphilin and
14:29
FOXP2 suggest this could be true and a
14:32
new mutation around 80,000 years ago
14:34
might explain the burst of cultural and
14:37
technological changes seen in the
14:38
archaeological record testing these
14:41
ideas is difficult as it's hard to prove
14:43
whether new behaviors came from new
14:45
brain capacities or just better use of
14:50
therefore the gradual development of
14:52
modern human behavior is one of the
14:54
primary reasons for delayed out of
14:56
Africa migration while homo sapiens
14:58
emerged in Africa around 300,000 years
15:01
ago complex cognitive traits like
15:04
symbolic thinking advanced tool making
15:06
and social organization did not fully
15:09
develop until a major leap around 80,000
15:11
years ago these traits were essential
15:14
for survival in new unfamiliar
15:16
environments as these capabilities
15:18
became more refined humans became better
15:21
equipped to explore and adapt to new
15:23
territories technological limitations
15:25
also played a role early humans
15:28
initially lacked the tools necessary for
15:30
long-d distanceance travel and survival
15:32
in different climates innovations such
15:34
as improved stone tools control of fire
15:37
clothing and methods of food storage
15:39
allowed for more sustained and
15:41
successful migrations in addition early
15:44
human populations were small and
15:46
scattered which naturally slowed the
15:48
pace of expansion migration requires a
15:50
certain population density and social
15:53
cooperation which likely took time to
15:55
develop another important factor was the
15:57
challenging climate and geography the
16:00
Sahara Desert which separated subsaharan
16:02
Africa from North Africa and Southwest
16:05
Asia was often too aid and vast to cross
16:08
only during certain green Sahara periods
16:11
when the region was wetter and more
16:13
hospitable due to shifts in the monsoon
16:15
could early humans realistically make
16:17
the journey northward similarly glacial
16:19
periods in Eurasia made northern roads
16:21
cold and inhospitable acting as a
16:24
barrier to migration lastly there may
16:26
not have been an immediate need to leave
16:28
Africa the continent was rich in
16:30
resources and ecological diversity
16:33
providing ample opportunities for
16:35
survival and adaptation without strong
16:38
push factors such as scarcity or
16:39
conflict there was little urgency to
16:42
migrate when conditions eventually
16:44
aligned both environmentally and
16:46
culturally humans began their successful
16:48
journey out of Africa around 60,000 to
16:51
70,000 years ago leading to the eventual
16:54
colonization of the rest of the world
16:57
another big question is how and when
16:59
modern humans left Africa and spread
17:01
across the world there are two main
17:03
theories north Africa route through the
17:06
Nile into Europe and Asia southern
17:09
coastal route from Ethiopia across the
17:12
Red Sea along the southern Asian coast
17:14
to places like Malaysia and Australia
17:17
dna evidence supports the southern route
17:19
it suggests a single successful
17:21
migration from Africa led by people
17:23
carrying the L3 genetic lineage which
17:26
later split into groups found in Asia
17:28
today this migration likely happened
17:30
around 65,000 to 50,000 years ago
17:33
however there's still little solid
17:35
archaeological evidence for modern
17:37
humans in Asia before 45,000 years ago
17:40
humans are believed to have reached
17:42
Majed Bay a rock shelter in northern
17:44
Australia around 65,000 years ago so
17:48
researchers are now focusing on southern
17:50
Asia to find clearer proof of this early
17:53
migration discoveries in DNA and
17:55
archaeology will be key to understanding
17:57
when and how our species spread