And a second 2005 article
Here
The second url works now, but it appears Paul originally meant to send a URL leading to Henry Harpending's webpage containing a selection of documents:
CLICK HERE(Added later as a modification. I see the second URL has been modified later and now leads to Harpending's page as I post below)Among these the sixth is a hyperlink to a pdf to the pre-print (it is not the CA paper itself) of Eswarans original paper "A Diffusion Wave Out of Africa". But I believe Paul was referring to the seventh document in the list, shown as "eswaran et al 2005 g". This is a hyperlink leading to an "in press" article of the most recent publication, no longer "in press" but published as:
Eswaran, V., Harpending, H. & Rogers, A.R. (2005). Genomics refutes an exclusively African origin of humans. Journal of Human Evolution 49 (1): 1-18.
CLICK HEREAbstract
Ten years ago, evidence from genetics gave strong support to the “recent African origin” view of the evolution of modern humans, which posits that Homo sapiens arose as a new species in Africa and subsequently spread, leading to the extinction of other archaic human species. Subsequent data from the nuclear genome not only fail to support this model, they do not support any simple model of human demographic history. In this paper, we study a process in which the modern human phenotype originates in Africa and then advances across the world by local demic diffusion, hybridization, and natural selection. While the multiregional model of human origins posits a number of independent single locus selective sweeps, and the “out of Africa” model posits a sweep of a new species, we study the intermediate case of a phenotypic sweep. Numerical simulations of this process replicate many of the seemingly contradictory features of the genetic data, and suggest that as much as 80% of nuclear loci have assimilated genetic material from non-African archaic humans.
Keywords: Modern human origins; Multiregional hypothesis; Out of Africa hypothesis; Phenotype sweep
I'm not sure whether announcement of this paper was ever posted here, but for those interested and do not have access to JHE, Harpending's webpage provides a link to the "in press" version of this latest published article dealing with Eswaran's diffusion wave model .
Dar