New findings on prehistoric human population growth
Researchers from China's Fudan University have found major
prehistoric human population expansions may have begun before the
Neolithic period, which probably led to the introduction of agriculture.
Major prehistoric human population expansions in three continents may
have begun before the Neolithic period -- around 15-11,000 years ago in
Africa, from around 13,000 years ago in Europe and around 12-8,000 years
ago in the Americas.The findings are published in Scientific Reports.

The development of agriculture facilitated extensive human population
growths and activities, but whether these major expansions began before
or after the Neolithic era, a period during which humans started to grow
crops and domesticate animals, remains controversial. Agriculture is
thought to have first developed in the Fertile Crescent of West Asia
around 12-11,000 years ago, and was then developed independently over
the next few thousand years in other regions.To compare global patterns
of population growth, Li Jin and colleagues analysed over 900
mitochrondrial genomes generated by the 1000 Genomes Project,
representing 11 populations in Africa, Europe and the Americas. They
identified the expansion lineages and were able to reconstruct the
historical demographical variations. On all three continents, most of
the major lineages coalesced before the first appearance of agriculture.
The data imply that major population expansions took place after the
Last Glacial Maximum (the peak of the last ice age) but before the
Neolithic period. The authors suggest that the milder climate after the
Last Glacial Maximum may have offered a more amiable environment and may
have been an important factor in prehistoric human expansions. The
increase in population size was probably one of the driving forces that
led to the introduction of agriculture, turning it from a supplementary
food source to the primary one.
-ScienceDaily
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