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Minimum founding populations for the first peopling of Sahul

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posted on 2024-11-16, 05:44 authored by Corey J A Bradshaw, Sean Ulm, Alan Williams, Michael I Bird, Richard RobertsRichard Roberts, Zenobia JacobsZenobia Jacobs, Fiona Laviano, Laura S Weyrich, Tobias Friedrich, Kasih Norman, Frédérik Saltréa
The timing, context and nature of the first people to enter Sahul is still poorly understood owing to a fragmented archaeological record. However, quantifying the plausible demographic context of this founding population is essential to determine how and why the initial peopling of Sahul occurred. We developed a stochastic, age-structured model using demographic rates from hunter-gatherer societies, and relative carrying capacity hindcasted with LOVECLIM's net primary productivity for northern Sahul. We projected these populations to determine the resilience and minimum sizes required to avoid extinction. A census founding population of between 1,300 and 1,550 individuals was necessary to maintain a quasi-extinction threshold of ≲0.1. This minimum founding population could have arrived at a single point in time, or through multiple voyages of ≥130 people over ~700-900 years. This result shows that substantial population amalgamation in Sunda and Wallacea in Marine Isotope Stages 3-4 provided the conditions for the successful, large-scale and probably planned peopling of Sahul.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage

Australian Research Council

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Out of Asia: unique insights into human evolution and interactions using frontier technologies in archaeological science

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Bradshaw, C. J.A., Ulm, S., Williams, A. N., Bird, M. I., Roberts, R. G., Jacobs, Z., Laviano, F., Weyrich, L. S., Friedrich, T., Norman, K. & Saltre, F. (2019). Minimum founding populations for the first peopling of Sahul. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 3 1057-1063.

Journal title

Nature Ecology and Evolution

Volume

3

Issue

7

Pagination

1057-1063

Language

English

RIS ID

136668

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