2010/3/10  <[email protected]>:
> Sebetulnya Mas dari dulu saya cari2 jawabannya, dari Buku2 Islam dan
> Injil, tapi belum dapat, Kapan Nabi Adam mulai hidup?

Kalau mau tengok video National Geographic pernah membuat video :
"Geneticist Searches for DNA of "Adam," the First Human"
Saya pernah nonton di Saluran National Geographic, tapi cari Video
DVDnya ga pernah ketemu. Konon dijual dalam bentuk DVD.
Di akhir ceritanya ada wajah Adam hasil rekonstruksi DNA. Wajahnya
sangat tipikal africans. Ini salah satu yang mendukung teori "out of
Africa"

RDP

Geneticist Searches for DNA of "Adam," the First Human
Hillary Mayell
National Geographic News
for National Geographic Channel
June 24, 2005

On TV: Don't miss
HREF="http://www.nationalgeographic.com/channel/explorer/";>Search for
Adam, premiering on the National Geographic Channel (U.S.),
Sunday, June 26, 8 p.m. ET/PT.


For many of us, the word "genetics" conjures vague thoughts of
disease, the human genome, and genetic engineering.

Spencer Wells thought "genetics" and forged a unique career that
combines his love for history with his passion for biology. A
geneticist, adventurer, author, filmmaker, and historian—the man adds
new dimension to the term multi-tasking—he is using the cutting-edge
of technology to explore human history.

He has traveled the world, collecting blood samples from people of
far-flung cultures: Aborigines in Australia, the Chukchi tundra
dwellers of Siberia, farmers in the hills of Afghanistan, and nomads
in the deserts of Africa. By studying the DNA of modern humans, he
seeks to learn who we are, where we traveled to populate the world,
and how closely we are all related.

"Each drop of blood is essentially a historical document," Wells said.
"Our DNA tells the story of the journey of our species."

New DNA studies suggest that all humans descended from a single
African ancestor who lived some 60,000 years ago. To uncover the paths
that lead from him to every living human, the National Geographic
Society launched the Genographic Project, headed by Spencer Wells. The
quest for "Adam" is the subject of a new television documentary that
airs on the National Geographic Channel in the U.S. this Sunday.

The project is a five-year endeavor undertaken as a partnership
between IBM and National Geographic. It will combine population
genetics and molecular biology to trace the migration of humans from
the time we first left Africa, 50,000 to 60,000 years ago, to the
places where we live today.

Ten research centers around the world have received funding from the
Waitt Family Foundation to collect and analyze blood samples from
indigenous populations (such as aboriginal groups), many in remote
areas. The Genographic Project hopes to collect more than a hundred
thousand DNA samples to create the largest gene bank in the world.
Members of the public are also being invited to participate.

"Our DNA tells a fascinating story of the human journey: how we are
all related and how our ancestors got to where we are today," Wells
said. "This project will show us some of the routes early humans
followed to populate the globe and paint a picture of the genetic
tapestry that connects us all."

Tracing Human History

"As often happens in science," said Wells, "technology has opened up a
field to new ways of answering old questions—often providing startling
answers."

One of the old questions that intrigued Wells was the question of
human origins. Whether early humans evolved in Africa or elsewhere,
when they began outward migration, and where they went, are issues
that have been argued among archaeologists, anthropologists, and
evolutionary biologists for decades.

By analyzing genetic changes in the Y-chromosome of people in all
regions of the world, Wells and colleagues concluded that all humans
alive today are descended from a single African man.

"We're all effectively cousins, separated by 2,000 generations," he said.

In his book, The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey, Wells describes
the exodus from Africa that began around 60,000 years ago, and the
path we took to populate the world.

Following the southern coastline of Asia, the first early travelers
crossed about 250 kilometers [155 miles] of sea, and colonized
Australia by around 50,000 years ago. The Aborigines of Australia,
Wells says, are the descendants of the first wave of migration out of
Africa.

A second wave left Africa around 45,000 years ago and settled in the
Middle East, with smaller groups going off to India, northern China,
and southern China. As the glaciers of the Ice Age began to retreat
around 40,000 years ago and temperatures warmed up, humans moved into
Central Asia and multiplied quickly.

Small groups left Central Asia around 35,000 years ago for Europe.
Around 20,000 years ago, another small group of Central Asians moved
farther north, into Siberia and the Arctic Circle.

He and his colleagues' paper, published in the September 2003 issue of
the American Journal of Human Genetics, added evidence to the debate
on the peopling of the Americas. The earliest archaeological evidence
of human habitation in North America dates to 11,500 radiocarbon years
old. Artifacts at a site in Monte Verde, Chile, are in the
12,500-year-old range. However, there are scientists who believe there
is some linguistic and archaeological evidence suggesting the
possibility that people may have arrived as much as 30,000 years ago.

Mutations in the Y-chromosome of populations in North and South
America put an upper limit on human arrival at somewhere between
18,000 to 15,000 years ago. "I would put the number at closer to
15,000," said Wells.

Legacy of Genghis Khan

In another study that looked at blood samples collected over a period
of ten years from more than 40 populations living in and around the
former Mongol empire of Genghis Khan, Wells and colleagues found that
nearly 8 percent of the men living in the region carry nearly
identical Y-chromosomes. That translates to roughly 16 million
descendants living today.

Archaeological finds and texts describing the history and culture of
the region provide some insight into how this one lineage could be so
successful, said Wells.

Khan's empire at the time of his death extended across Asia. His
military conquests frequently entailed the wholesale slaughter of the
vanquished, wiping out many populations. Contemporary documents report
that after a conquest, looting, pillaging, and rape were the spoils of
war for all soldiers, but that Khan got first pick of the beautiful
women. In addition, his male descendants were markedly prolific. They
extended the empire and maintained power in the region for several
hundred years, in a culture in which harems and concubines were the
norm. Khan's eldest son is reported to have had 40 sons. His grandson,
Kublai Khan, had 22 legitimate sons, and was said to add 30 virgins to
his harem each year.

"This is a clear example that culture plays a very big role in
patterns of genetic variation and diversity in human populations,"
said Wells.

Lost Empires

In addition to a general passion for history, Wells has an abiding
interest in lost empires. One of his current projects involves trying
to track down the Phoenicians, a civilization that extended from
roughly 3000 B.C. to 332 B.C.

"There's remarkably little archaeological evidence of them, and yet
they were the dominant culture of the time," said Wells. "Egyptian
texts starting from about 1200 B.C. talk about marauding warriors
arriving from the sea, yet we really have no idea who they were or
where they came from and where they went."

The Phoenicians were a seafaring people who settled a number of
independent city-states around the Mediterranean in modern-day
countries Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Tunisia, Greece, and Spain. United
by a common language, their alphabet became the prototype for the
Greek and Roman alphabets; they were the first people to
circumnavigate Africa, and may even have reached America.

But where did they come from and where did they go? For that we'll
have to wait for the next installment of Spencer Wells' exploration.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PP-IAGI 2008-2011:
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Ayo siapkan diri....!!!!!
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