PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Francesca Tassi AU - Silvia Ghirotto AU - Massimo Mezzavilla AU - Sibelle Torres Vilaça AU - Lisa De Santi AU - Guido Barbujani TI - Early modern human dispersal from Africa: genomic evidence for multiple waves of migration AID - 10.1101/022889 DP - 2015 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 022889 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/07/20/022889.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2015/07/20/022889.full AB - Background Anthropological and genetic data agree in indicating the African continent as the main place of origin for modern human. However, it is unclear whether early modern humans left Africa through a single, major process, dispersing simultaneously over Asia and Europe, or in two main waves, first through the Arab peninsula into Southern Asia and Oceania, and later through a Northern route crossing the Levant.Results Here we show that accurate genomic estimates of the divergence times between European and African populations are more recent than those between Australo-Melanesia and Africa, and incompatible with the effects of a single dispersal. This difference cannot possibly be accounted for by the effects of hybridization with archaic human forms in Australo-Melanesia. Furthermore, in several populations of Asia we found evidence for relatively recent genetic admixture events, which could have obscured the signatures of the earliest processes.Conclusions We conclude that the hypothesis of a single major human dispersal from Africa appears hardly compatible with the observed historical and geographical patterns of genome diversity, and that Australo-Melanesian populations seem still to retain a genomic signature of a more ancient divergence from Africa