(Snip)
The polytypic species viewpoint of Wolpoff et al. (1984) is endorsed and a strict Out-of-Africa replacement model is rejected on morphological, archaeological and genetic grounds. Rather, "the most reasonable explanation for the fortuitous occurrence of these features in Pleistocene
China is that they are attributable to small amounts of intermittent gene flow from the West" with "gene flow [becoming] a more potent force in later periods such as the Late Pleistocene and Holocene, thus diminishing the differences between the human populations of China and those westward".
(snip)
and may imply different times of migration from Africa".
I got a link on a short paper by a team of researchers from Lyon University in France who reaches similar conclusions :
Early symbolism: cognitive evidence for language abilities, Dasa Raimanova, Jean-Marie Hombert & Christophe Coupé
Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, CNRS a Université Lyon 2, Lyon, France
http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/evolang/ABSTRACTS/TALKS/raimanova-hombert.txtHere is a short extract :
"At the beginning of Upper Paleolithic, modern humans were already dispersed over a significant area of the world. According to the Cultural Revolution hypothesis, the appearance of art, ritual burials etc. nevertheless took place in a very short scale of time, which is difficult to explain given the distances between human populations spread over tens of millions of square kilometers. Such notions as geographical distribution of early traces of symbolism and language have therefore to be taken into account in parallel to their ancestry to clearly assess the possibility of one scenario or the other. Our objective is to revisit a number of discoveries which can be considered as clues of an early modern behavior and language. In addition to the degree of confidence which can be attributed to their relevance, we analyze their spatiotemporal distribution to investigate whether it can be best explained by i) a unique and sudden emergence of language and symbolism, ii) a slower and more gradual process, or iii) several cradles of emergence which could be regarded altogether as a polygenesis of human cultural innovations. "
The chinese finds bring strength to that theory doesn't it ?
Paul