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Showing Original Post only (View all)Polynesian seafarers discovered America long before Europeans, says DNA study [View all]
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/polynesian-seafarers-discovered-america-long-beforeClues about the migration patterns of the early Polynesians have been revealed thanks to a new DNA analysis performed on a prolific Polynesian crop: the sweet potato, according to Nature. The origin of the sweet potato in Polynesia has long been a mystery, since the crop was first domesticated in the Andes of South America about 8,000 years ago, and it couldn't have spread to other parts of the world until contact was made. In other words, if Europeans were indeed the first to make contact with the Americas between 500 and 1,000 years ago, then the sweet potato shouldn't be found anywhere else in the world until then.
The extensive DNA study looked at genetic samples taken from modern sweet potatoes from around the world and historical specimens kept in herbarium collections. Remarkably, the herbarium specimens included plants collected during Capt. James Cooks 1769 visits to New Zealand and the Society Islands. The findings confirmed that sweet potatoes in Polynesia were part of a distinct lineage that were already present in the area when European voyagers introduced different lines elsewhere. In other words, sweet potatoes made it out of America before European contact.
The question remains: How else could Polynesians have gotten their hands on sweet potatoes prior to European contact, if not by traveling to America themselves? The possibility that sweet potato seeds could have inadvertently floated from the Americas to Polynesia on land rafts is believed to be highly unlikely.
Researchers believe that Polynesian seafarers must have discovered the Americas first, long before Europeans did. The new DNA evidence, taken together with archaeological and linguistic evidence regarding the timeline of Polynesian expansion, suggests that an original contact date between 500 CE and 700 CE between Polynesia and America seems likely. That means that Polynesians would have arrived in South America even before the Norse had landed in Newfoundland.
The extensive DNA study looked at genetic samples taken from modern sweet potatoes from around the world and historical specimens kept in herbarium collections. Remarkably, the herbarium specimens included plants collected during Capt. James Cooks 1769 visits to New Zealand and the Society Islands. The findings confirmed that sweet potatoes in Polynesia were part of a distinct lineage that were already present in the area when European voyagers introduced different lines elsewhere. In other words, sweet potatoes made it out of America before European contact.
The question remains: How else could Polynesians have gotten their hands on sweet potatoes prior to European contact, if not by traveling to America themselves? The possibility that sweet potato seeds could have inadvertently floated from the Americas to Polynesia on land rafts is believed to be highly unlikely.
Researchers believe that Polynesian seafarers must have discovered the Americas first, long before Europeans did. The new DNA evidence, taken together with archaeological and linguistic evidence regarding the timeline of Polynesian expansion, suggests that an original contact date between 500 CE and 700 CE between Polynesia and America seems likely. That means that Polynesians would have arrived in South America even before the Norse had landed in Newfoundland.
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Polynesian seafarers discovered America long before Europeans, says DNA study [View all]
KamaAina
Feb 2015
OP
thor heyerdahl sailed from SA to Polynesia on a raft, proving it could be done and likely was nt
msongs
Feb 2015
#3
I seem to recall some Siberian native peiple did something similar to totem poles.
AngryAmish
Feb 2015
#11
The Yale Precision Marching Band has not been invited to New Haven's Columbus Day parade
KamaAina
Feb 2015
#7
Because something fundamentally happened after Columbus voyage that did not happen prior
Johonny
Feb 2015
#13
It's pretty easy to be a seafarer when you have satellites to tell you where you are...
Johnyawl
Feb 2015
#15
Open sea navigation in outrigger canoes aiming, not for contintinental masses, but islands...
Hekate
Feb 2015
#16
I've heard they could tell an island was over the horizon by the different type of waves they felt
aint_no_life_nowhere
Feb 2015
#19
China assayed some sea travel, it is true, but for the most part the Middle Kingdom faced toward...
Hekate
Feb 2015
#22
Not really surprising at all. Some of the coastal Pacific NW tribes have traditional stories passed
scarletwoman
Feb 2015
#14
"The Daughters of Copper Woman" retell ancient stories about tribal traveling
Luminous Animal
Feb 2015
#17