Thursday, June 30, 2011

Kon-Tiki explorer was partly right – Polynesians had South American roots

It is probably the most epic journey ever undertaken just to prove a point.



Thor Heyerdahl clung to Kon-Tiki, his balsa wood raft, for 4,300 miles to show that Polynesia could have been colonised from South America rather than Asia as commonly thought.

But despite achieving his goal – sustaining his 101 day voyage with sharks caught with his bare hands – the Norwegian failed to sway the scientific community.

Now – 64 years later- new research has finally proved the adventurer was at least partly right after all.

A team of scientists have tested the genetic make up of descendants of the original islanders and found it includes DNA that could have only come from native Americans.

That means that some time before the remote islands – including Easter Island – were colonised by Europeans the locals had interbred with people from South America.

The Polynesian islands are some of the most remote in the world – lying thousands of miles west of South America and thousands of miles east of Asia.

The established theory has always been that Polynesia was colonised via Asia around 5,500 years ago.

This has been backed up by archaeology, linguistics and some genetic studies.

But in 1947, Heyerdahl controversially claimed that Easter Island's famous statues were similar to those at Lake Titicaca in Bolivia, and sailed a raft from Peru to French Polynesia to prove it could have been colonised from America.

Now Professor Erik Thorsby of the University of Oslo in Norway has found clear evidence to support elements of Heyerdahl's hypothesis.

In 1971 and 2008 he collected blood samples from Easter Islanders whose ancestors had not interbred with Europeans and other visitors to the island.

Prof Thorsby looked at the genes, which vary greatly from person to person.

Most of the islanders' genes were Polynesian, but a few of them also carried genes only previously found in indigenous American populations.

Prof Thorsby found that in some cases the Polynesian and American genes were shuffled together, the result of a process known "recombination".

This means the American genes would need to be around for a certain amount of time for it to happen.

Prof Thorsby can't put a precise date on it, but says it is likely that Americans reached Easter Island before it was "discovered" by Europeans in 1722.

Prof Thorsby believes there may have been a Kon-Tiki-style voyage from South America to Polynesia.

Alternatively, Polynesians may have travelled east to South America, and then returned.

However, Prof Thorsby said that his new evidence does not confirm Heyerdahl's theory that the islanders were originally all from South America.

The first settlers to Polynesia came from Asia, and they made the biggest contribution to the population, he said.

"Heyerdahl was wrong but not completely," he said.

The work was presented at a Royal Society talk in London and reported in the New Scientist.
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References:

Alleyne, Richard. 2011. "Kon-Tiki explorer was partly right – Polynesians had South American roots". Telegraph Science News. Posted: June 17, 2011. Available online: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/8582150/Kon-Tiki-explorer-was-partly-right-Polynesians-had-South-American-roots.html

2 comments:

DHBoggs said...

This article and the good professor are factually incorrect in thier characterization of Heyerdahl's thesis, a thesis his entire book Aku-Aku was devoted to. Heyerdahl never argued that "all" polynesians or Easter Islanders originated in South America, he argued only that the ruling class of Easer Island - the "long ears" and some of the population of some polynesian islands originated in South America, but the majority of the population was of Asian origin. I'd say the study shows him to be more than just a little correct.

rvmeeker said...

For decades, Heyerdahl has been given short shrift by the professional academic community, who were completely dismissive of his theories on Polynesian settlement. From his first exhaustive treatment on the subject in 1952, "American Indians in the Pacific", to and through his considerable archeological and published work on Rapa Nui and other Eastern Pacific islands, Heyerdahl's contributions were considerable. Personally, I never felt that his evidence for a significant population contribution to Polynesian settlement held up to serious scrutiny. However, his evidence for significant cultural contribution is very compelling, and the academic community was wrong to be so dismissive of everything he had to say. Any serious comparison of the megalithic monuments found in the Marquesas, Rapa Nui and Raivavae to similar structures in Middle and South America demonstrates the uncanny similarity and obvious influence. Finally, the sweet potato in Polynesia cannot be explained any other way. The jury verdict still appears to be out regarding conclusive DNA evidence, but if pre-European contact skeletal remains can ever be found, that may well clinch the argument for American cultural influence.