We are a movable species. In less than 50 thousand years, Homo sapiens has penetrated practically all corners of humanity. And the story started long before trains and airplanes.
This is an episode about thoese epic migrations, with a focus on the two furthest edges of the human migratory map: the Americas in the West and the Polynesian islands in the east. In the end, we discuss emerging evidence that those branches met each other -- work coming directly out of the work of my guest, Andrés Moreno-Estrada.
Enjoy!
DECODING OUR STORY
This is episode 3 in the "Decoding Our Story" mini-series, recorded live at the Salk Institute's CARTA symposium on ancient DNA. The other episodes are:
"The Neanderthal Mirror: Latest Findings About the Lines Between Us" ~ David Gokhman
"Beyond Race: A New Outlook on the Shape of Humanity" ~ Diyendo Massilani
FACT CHECKING
No errors have been found as of now. If you find an error in this or other episodes, get in touch via the form below.
LINKS
Articles and essays: OnHumans.Substack.com
Support: Patreon.com/OnHumans
Contact Form: https://forms.gle/h5wcmefuwvD6asos8
CARTA symposium
The Moreno lab
KEYWORDS
Human population history | Human origins | Anthropogeny | Anthropology | Ancient Migration | Out of Africa | Homo sapiens | Ancient DNA | Comparative genetics | Austronesian expansion | Taiwan | Admixture | Archaeogenetics | Archaeology | Polynesia | Easter Islands | Rapa Nui | Hawai'i | Aotearoa New Zealand | Tonga Fiji | Native American origins | Latino genetics | Latinx genetics | Hispanic genetics | Indegenous genetics |