Genetic history of Africa
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The genetic history of Africa tells us about the ancestors and families of people who have lived on the continent for thousands of years. It helps us understand how groups of people in Africa are related to each other and where they came from.
Africa is a huge place with many different areas, like North Africa, West Africa, East Africa, Central Africa, and Southern Africa. Each of these places has its own special history and ways of life. Scientists study the DNA of people living there today to learn about their past.
One important fact is that modern humans — people like us — first appeared in Africa. This means that all people in the world today can trace their ancestors back to Africa. The Sahara desert has changed over time, sometimes being wet and green and other times being dry and sandy. When it was wetter, people could travel across it more easily. But when it became a desert, it acted like a wall, making it harder for groups of people to mix between the north and the central parts of Africa. Even so, people still found ways to stay connected during certain times in history.
Overview
Africans have different genetic backgrounds based on where they live and their language families. Populations that share the same language and ethnic background often have similar genetic makeup. Events like migration, mixing between groups, and changes in population sizes have shaped the genetic diversity in Africa. The spread of Bantu-speaking people had a big impact, leading to more genetic and linguistic similarity across the continent.
Different African groups show unique genetic patterns, but they can often be grouped together in certain ways:
- Khoisan or South African hunter-gatherers from Southern Africa are known for having one of the oldest genetic lines, diverging around 270,000 years ago.
- Central African hunter-gatherers or Rain forest hunter-gatherers are linked to deep genetic roots around 220,000 years ago.
- Ancestral Eurasians represent the group from which modern Eurasians originated, splitting off from other African groups about 70,000 years ago.
- Afroasiatic-speakers from Northern Africa and the Horn of Africa diverged from other African groups around 50,000 years ago and have mixed with West Asian groups.
- Eastern African hunter-gatherers show connections to both East and West African groups and have some mixing with Eurasian groups.
- Ancient East Africans are linked to the ancestors of modern Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan speakers, originating around 28,000 years ago in the Nile Valley region.
- Malagasy people in Madagascar have ancestry from both East/Southeast Asia and Africa, with mixing happening about 2,200 years ago.
Indigenous Africans
The term indigenous Africans refers to groups with mainly African ancestry, including Niger-Congo speakers, Nilo-Saharan speakers, and the Khoisan grouping, among others. The origins of Afroasiatic languages are still debated, with some thinking they started in the Middle East and others in Africa. The Austronesian languages began in southern East Asia and later spread from the Philippines.
The Niger-Congo languages likely started in West Africa or Central Africa before the Bantu expansion. Their spread may have been linked to the beginning of farming during the African Neolithic period, after the Sahara dried up around 3500 BCE. The Nilo-Saharan language family’s origin is uncertain, but it is thought to have started between Chad, Sudan, and the Central African Republic around 10,000–8,000 BCE. The Southern African hunter-gatherers (Khoisan) are believed to be the original hunter-gatherer group in southern Africa before Bantu-speakers and East African pastoralists arrived.
Out-of-Africa event
Main article: Recent African origin of modern humans
The recent African origin of modern humans suggests that all modern humans started in Africa. Recent studies show that Homo sapiens-subgroups originated in many parts of Africa, not just one area. The ancestors of all modern humans likely left Northeastern Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago. All non-African populations come from one or more groups of Homo sapiens that left Africa between 70,000 and 60,000 years ago.
Studies show that West African populations have a small amount of DNA from ancient human types that lived before modern humans and Neanderthals, dating back between 360,000 and 1,020,000 years ago. All African groups also have some Neanderthal ancestry, though at lower levels than Eurasian groups.
Geneflow between Eurasian and African populations
See also: Eurasian backflow
Significant mixing with Eurasian groups is found in Northern Africa, the Horn of Africa, Northern Sudan, the Sahel region, and among the Malagasy people of Madagascar. Studies show multiple ancient movements of people from Eurasia into Africa and mixing with local groups. West Eurasian mixing reached Northern Africa during the Paleolithic period (30,000 to 15,000 years ago), followed by other migrations before and during the Neolithic period. Medieval events, like the Arab expansion, also left genetic traces in African populations. Research shows that Western Eurasian ancestry reached Southeast Africa and Southern Africa through Northeast Africa.
Ramsay et al. (2018) found evidence of significant Western Eurasian mixing in many parts of Africa, from both ancient and recent migrations. This mixing was highest among groups from Northern Africa and some in the Horn of Africa.
There is no clear agreement on when or where the original home of the Afroasiatic language family was. Some think it spread by people with West-Eurasian ancestry during the Neolithic Revolution from the Middle East, specifically the Levant. Others argue that the first speakers were in Northeast Africa because that area has the most diversity in the Afroasiatic language family.
The Near-Eastern agriculturalist hypothesis does not explain the domestication of plants native to the Horn of Africa such as teff, ensete, and Niger seed, nor does it explain the lack of evidence for crops like wheat, barley, or sorghum in that region before 3000 B.C.
David Schoenbrun, Christopher Ehret, Steven A. Brandt and Shomarka Keita (2025) have pointed out problems in how genetic haplogroups are labeled as ‘African’ and ‘Eurasian' in North African genome studies.
Horn of Africa
While many studies on Horn of Africa populations estimate West-Eurasian mixing around 3,000 years ago, Hodgson et al. (2014) found a distinct West-Eurasian ancestral component among Afroasiatic-speaking groups in the Horn of Africa (and to a lesser extent in North Africa and West Asia), most common among the ethnic Somali. This component, called "Ethio-Somali", is most closely related to the "Maghrebi" component and is believed to have split from other non-African ancestries around 23,000 years ago, and moved back to Africa before agriculture developed (12–23 ka) from the Near East.
Another 2004 mtDNA study included samples from Gurna, Upper Egypt and grouped them with Ethiopian and Yemeni groups, between Near Eastern and other African sample groups.
The E-M35 haplogroup subclade is found among all Afro-Asiatic speaking regions, with the M-78 clade now thought to have originated in Sudan or Egypt, "or further south in the northeastern quadrant of Africa".
In an analysis of 68 Ethiopian ethnic groups, Lopez et al. (2021) found that several groups belonging to the three AA classifications of Cushitic, Omotic and Semitic show high genetic similarity on average. Furthermore, Nilo-Saharan speakers in the southwest share more recent ancestry with Bantu and Nilotics, while Afro-Asiatic speakers in the northeast share more recent ancestry with Egyptians and other West Eurasians.
Madagascar
Specific East Asian-related ancestry is found among Malagasy speakers of Madagascar at a medium frequency. This is mostly linked to the Austronesian peoples' expansion from Southeast Asia. The peoples of Borneo were identified as resembling the East Asian voyagers who arrived in Madagascar.
Northern Africa
Genetic studies have identified a high frequency of E haplogroup subclades across Egypt, including among Egyptian Copts in Adaima, Upper Egypt and émigré Coptic communities in Sudan. Other haplogroups notably occurring in Egyptian populations have included the J and R haplogroups.
A 2005 study found that populations in Somalia, Sudan, Egypt and Oromos in Ethiopia share the same Y chromosome haplogroup E3b1, defined by E-M78.
A 2005 genetic study found close links of eastern sub-Saharan populations with Egypt in phylogenetic trees through analysis of short DNA sequences.
Dobon et al. (2015) identified an autosomal ancestral component commonly found among modern Afroasiatic-speaking populations (as well as Nubians) in Northeast Africa.
Chen et al. (2020) analyzed 2,504 African samples from all over Africa, and found Neanderthal ancestry among all tested African samples at low frequency.
There is minor gene flow from North Africa into parts of Southern Europe, supported by the presence of an African-specific mitochondrial haplogroup among one of four 4,000 year old samples. Multiple studies have also found evidence for gene flow of African ancestry towards Eurasia, specifically Europe and the Middle East.
Western Africa
Hollfelder et al. (2021) concluded that West African Yoruba people, previously used as an "unmixed reference population" for indigenous Africans, have minor levels of Neanderthal ancestry, which can be largely linked to back-migration of an "Ancestral European-like" source population.
A genome-wide study of a Fulani community from Burkina Faso inferred two major mixing events in this group, dating to ~1800 ya, and 300 ya.
Southern Africa
Low levels of West Eurasian ancestry (European or Middle Eastern) are found in Khoe–Kwadi Khoesan-speakers. This may have been acquired indirectly by mixing with migrating pastoralists from East Africa.
Regional genomic overview
The genetic history of Africa shows the different groups of people and their history. Modern humans began in Africa, and the Sahara Desert was important. It helped people move between places and sometimes stopped them.
North Africa
Main article: Genetic history of North Africa
Further information: DNA history of Egypt and Genetic studies on Moroccans
Ancient DNA shows that people in North Africa are connected to groups nearby and far away. Movements and climate changes shaped these connections over time.
West Africa
Main article: Genetic history of West Africa
Further information: Genetic history of the African diaspora
West Africa has ancient ties and later influences from other places. DNA from modern and ancient people helps show these links and changes.
Central Africa
Main article: Genetic history of Central Africa
Further information: Genetic history of the African diaspora
See also: African Pygmies § Genetics
Central Africa has a mix of ancient local groups and later influences. DNA studies show links to groups nearby and far away.
Eastern Africa
Main article: Genetic history of Eastern Africa
Further information: Genetic history of the African diaspora
Eastern Africa has been important in human history. Ancient DNA shows links to many other groups. Studies help trace these connections over time.
Southern Africa
Main article: Genetic history of Southern Africa
Further information: Genetic history of the African diaspora
See also: San people § Genetics, and Khoekhoe
Southern Africa has some of the oldest human groups. DNA studies show ancient local ties and later influences from other places.
Recent African origin of modern humans
Main article: Recent African origin of modern humans
Further information: Early human migrations, Basal Eurasian, and Human genetic variation
Between 500,000 and 300,000 years ago, modern humans first appeared in Africa. Over time, they spread from Africa to other parts of the world. Many scientists think humans may have come from many places in Africa, not just one spot.
Africans have more genetic differences among themselves than people from other parts of the world. This shows that most genetic variety started in Africa. Africans have adapted to their environments in many ways, such as developing resistance to diseases like malaria. These adaptations help protect them from illnesses common in Africa.
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