Major expansion in the human niche preceded out of Africa dispersal
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All contemporary Eurasians trace most of their ancestry to a small population that dispersed out of Africa about 50,000 years ago (ka)1-9. By contrast, fossil evidence attests to earlier migrations out of Africa10-15. These lines of evidence can only be reconciled if early dispersals made little to no genetic contribution to the later, major wave. A key question therefore concerns what factors facilitated the successful later dispersal that led to long-term settlement beyond Africa. Here we show that a notable expansion in human niche breadth within Africa precedes this later dispersal. We assembled a pan-African database of chronometrically dated archaeological sites and used species distribution models (SDMs) to quantify changes in the bioclimatic niche over the past 120,000 years. We found that the human niche began to expand substantially from 70 ka and that this expansion was driven by humans increasing their use of diverse habitat types, from forests to arid deserts. Thus, humans dispersing out of Africa after 50 ka were equipped with a distinctive ecological flexibility among hominins as they encountered climatically challenging habitats, providing a key mechanism for their adaptive success.
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Acknowledgements: This project was financed by the Max Planck Society. M.L., R.B., M.K. and A.M. were financed by the ERC Consolidator Grant 647787 ‘LocalAdaptation’. M.L. and A.M. were financed by the Leverhulme Research Grant RPG-2020-317. A.W.K. is financed by the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, which is promoted by the Joint Science Conference of the Federal and State governments of the Republic of Germany within the framework of the Academies’ Programme. Funding comes from the Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Research and the state of Baden-Württemberg’s Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts.
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1476-4687
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European Research Council (647787)

