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Author Topic: Bantu
DD'eDeN
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Dispersals and genetic adaptation of Bantu-speaking populations in Africa
and North America
Etienne Patin cs 2017
Science 356:543-6
doi 10.1126/science.aal1988

Bantu languages are spoken by c 310 M Africans, yet
the genetic history of Bantu-speaking populations remains largely
unexplored.
We generated genomic data for 1318 individuals from 35 populations in
W-C.Africa (where Bantu languages originated):
- early Bantu speakers first moved south-ward, through the equatorial
rain-forest,
- then spread toward E- & S-Africa.
- genetic adaptation of Bantu speakers was facilitated by admixture with
local populations (esp. the HLA & LCT loci).
We identified a major contribution of W-C.African Bantu speakers to the
ancestry of African Americans, whose genomes present no strong signals of
natural selection.
Together, these results highlight the contribution of Bantu-speaking
peoples to the complex genetic history of Africans & African Americans.
___

On the history of Bantu speakers

Africans are underrepresented in many surveys of genetic diversity,
this hinders our ability to study human evolution & the health of modern
populations.
Patin cs examined the genetic diversity of Bantu speakers (1/3 of
sub-Saharan Africans).
They then modeled the timing of migration & admixture during the Bantu
expansion.
This revealed adaptive introgression of genes that likely originated in
other African populations (e.g. specific immune-related genes).
Applying this information to African Americans suggests that gene-flow
from Africa into the Americas was more complex than previously thought.
<http://science.sciencemag.org/lookup/doi/10.1126/science.aal1988>

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capra
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Thanks DD'eDeN! Looks very interesting.
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Autshumato
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quote:
Originally posted by DD'eDeN:
Dispersals and genetic adaptation of Bantu-speaking populations in Africa
and North America
Etienne Patin cs 2017
Science 356:543-6
doi 10.1126/science.aal1988

Bantu languages are spoken by c 310 M Africans, yet
the genetic history of Bantu-speaking populations remains largely
unexplored.
We generated genomic data for 1318 individuals from 35 populations in
W-C.Africa (where Bantu languages originated):
- early Bantu speakers first moved south-ward, through the equatorial
rain-forest,
- then spread toward E- & S-Africa.
- genetic adaptation of Bantu speakers was facilitated by admixture with
local populations (esp. the HLA & LCT loci).
We identified a major contribution of W-C.African Bantu speakers to the
ancestry of African Americans, whose genomes present no strong signals of
natural selection.
Together, these results highlight the contribution of Bantu-speaking
peoples to the complex genetic history of Africans & African Americans.
___

On the history of Bantu speakers

Africans are underrepresented in many surveys of genetic diversity,
this hinders our ability to study human evolution & the health of modern
populations.
Patin cs examined the genetic diversity of Bantu speakers (1/3 of
sub-Saharan Africans).
They then modeled the timing of migration & admixture during the Bantu
expansion.
This revealed adaptive introgression of genes that likely originated in
other African populations (e.g. specific immune-related genes).
Applying this information to African Americans suggests that gene-flow
from Africa into the Americas was more complex than previously thought.
<http://science.sciencemag.org/lookup/doi/10.1126/science.aal1988>

There is no such thing as Bantu people because Bantu means people. LOL!

--------------------
“Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.”

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DD'eDeN
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In non-Bantu languages, obviously, bantu does not mean people.

In Bantu languages, bantu means people, muntu means person.

People who speak Bantu languages are called by outsiders/Europeans "Bantu" as a conventional descriptive name for the group. Zulus are Bantu-speakers (with San borrowings), Ki-Swahili is a Bantu language (with Arabic borrowings).

--------------------
xyambuatlaya

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Snakepit1
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^^
The word "bantu" doesn't necessarily exist in all the languages in the "bantu" phylum.

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DD'eDeN
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Most likely not, words evolve through time and location.

--------------------
xyambuatlaya

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