Native Americans Arrived in Three Waves, all from Siberia: DNA Confirm

It is a quite interesting study, and the DNA seems to confirm what was said years ago, but dismissed by many — that Native Americans came from Siberia in three distinct waves.

Native Americans Arrived in Three Waves, All from Siberia

Americas ‘Settled in Three Waves’

The biggest survey of Native American DNA has concluded that the New World was settled in three major waves. | Tools ‘demand new American story’ | Old American theory is ‘speared’ | Early man was ‘ancient mariner’ | Date limit set on first Americans | *** | Carolinanaturally.Blogspot.Com


Compare and contrast: Professor Jody Hey compared the DNA sequences collected from Native Americans and Siberian Natives, providing a 'detailed portrait of historical populations'
Compare and contrast: Professor Jody Hey compared the DNA sequences collected from Native Americans and Siberian Natives, providing a ‘detailed portrait of historical populations’

Native Americans Arrived in Three Waves, All from Siberia
Native Americans Arrived in Three Waves, All from Siberia

It is a quite interesting study, and the DNA seems to confirm what was said years ago, but dismissed by many — that Native Americans came from Siberia in three distinct waves. North and South America were first populated by three waves of migrants from Siberia rather than just a single migration, say researchers who have studied the whole genomes of Native Americans in South America and Canada. Some scientists assert that the Americas were peopled in one large migration from Siberia that happened about 15,000 years ago, but the new genetic research shows that this central episode was followed by at least two smaller migrations from Siberia, one by people who became the ancestors of today’s Eskimos and Aleutians and another by people speaking Na-Dene, whose descendants are confined to North America. The research was published online on Wednesday in the journal Nature. The finding vindicates a proposal first made on linguistic grounds by Joseph Greenberg, the great classifier of the world’s languages.

He asserted in 1987 that most languages spoken in North and South America were derived from the single parent tongue of the first settlers from Siberia, which he called Amerind. Two later waves, he surmised, brought speakers of Eskimo-Aleut and of Na-Dene, the language family spoken by the Apache and Navajo.

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