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Most likely yes but there are all types of answers to the question.

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  • Yes, all humans originated in Africa. Scientists have determined that the region that is now Ethiopia was a likely place for the first humans to have evolved. From there they slowly spread out. At this time the geography of the world was slightly different and humans were able to travel extremely far and over land bridges, all the way to the continents known as the America's today. The first place that settled humans started to settle as farmers rather than hunter gatherers was in the middle-east near Iraq. This is where many of the world's oldest history comes from.
  • The earliest species of Homo (members of our genus) did evolve and live only in Africa. However, later species such as Homo erectus increased their distribution and expanded into other areas of the globe. Individual members of this species and other later homo did not all come from Africa.
  • No, it's all speculations. There was also a claim we originated from Asia. Most biologists and scientists are all delusional. They always find something and then claim it's fact when it's always just a theory, then years later they find out they were wrong and it's actually something else, then they find out it wasn't really that either.
  • The earliest species of Homo (members of our genus) did evolve and live only in Africa. However, later species such as Homo erectus increased their distribution and expanded into other areas of the globe. Individual members of this species and other later homo did not all come from Africa.
  • Recent studies on ribosomal DNA indicates that all modern humans had a common ancestor in northern Africa.
  • Yes, all humans originated in Africa. Scientists have determined that the region that is now Ethiopia was a likely place for the first humans to have evolved. From there they slowly spread out. At this time the geography of the world was slightly different and humans were able to travel extremely far and over land bridges, all the way to the continents known as the America's today. The first place that settled humans started to settle as farmers rather than hunter gatherers was in the middle-east near Iraq. This is where many of the world's oldest history comes from.
  • Those geneticists advocating the 'African Eve' hypothesis are not in agreement with another branch of science-paleoanthropology, the examination of fossil remains. On the basis of the fossil remains paleoanthropologists maintain that there is a wide divergence of humanity going well back prior to the mere 200,000 years ascribed to different populations by the 'African Eve' protagonists. On the basis of the fossil evidence human divergence occurred one to two million years ago, where the features that today mark Europeans, Australian Aborigines, Chinese et al. were already present. The 'out of Africa' hypothesis of human migrations 200,000 years ago was proposed by Wilson and Cann in 1992 (Allan C. Wilson and Rebecca L. Cann, The Recent African Genesis of Humans, Scientific American 1992, no. 266: 68-73.).
  • Yes, all humans originated in Africa. Scientists have determined that the region that is now Ethiopia was a likely place for the first humans to have evolved. From there they slowly spread out. At this time the geography of the world was slightly different and humans were able to travel extremely far and over land bridges, all the way to the continents known as the America's today. The first place that settled humans started to settle as farmers rather than hunter gatherers was in the middle-east near Iraq. This is where many of the world's oldest history comes from.
  • What paleoanthropologists now call 'multiregional evolution' on the other hand postulates racial divergence far beyond that time, on the basis of the fossil evidence. Alan G. Thorne and Milford H. Wolpoff state the polygenic or multiregional basis of modern human origins. They maintain that there is no single recent dispersal for modern humans, that humans originated in Africa and then slowly developed their modern forms in every area of the Old World.
  • According to the multiregional view, mtDNA is not our only source of evidence. Fossil remains and artefacts represent more reliable evidence. Multiregional evolution traces all populations to humans first leaving Africa 1.8 million years ago. Distinctive populations have maintained physical differences. The features that distinguish Asians, Australian Aborigines and Europeans are said to have evolved over a long period where these peoples are found today.
  • The hominid fossils from Australasia show a continuous anatomic sequence, with the earliest Australians displaying features seen in Indonesia 100,000 years ago. Similar evidence is seen in northern Asia where one million years old Chinese fossils differ from Javan fossils in ways that parallel the differences between north Asians and Australians today (Alan G. Thorne and Milford H. Wolpoff, The Multiregional Evolution of Humans, Scientific American 1992, no. 266: 76-83).
    In a typically biased account by P. Shipman in the January 16, 1993 issue of The New Scientist the hypothesis of Thorne and Wolpoff was nonetheless succinctly described among misleading comments about how genetic differences among races play no role in their relationship to society. Some of the relevant descriptions of the Thorne, Wolpoff hypothesis follow:
  • At what stage in human evolution did the modern races evolve? And can ethnic behaviours and customs act as a selective force in human evolution, helping to shape the physical characteristics of the five or so genetic subgroups of humanity that we call races? Recent attempts to find clues in fossil and skeletal remains have triggered some fierce academic skirmishes. The main battle centres on the attempts of a small band of researchers to prove that human races are hundreds of thousands of years older than conventional theories would have us believe. Milford Wolpoff of the University of Michigan and his colleagues maintain that the principal human races-Negroids, Caucasoids, Mongoloids, Australian aboriginal peoples and southern African Bushmen-began to evolve well before the appearance of anatomically modern humans, Homo sapiens. Contrary to mainstream thinking, races did not evolve because of modern humans leaving Africa to colonize the rest of the world some 100 000 to 200 000 years ago. Ironically, in everyday life most of the divisions we recognize are ethnic - that is, concern learned behavior and cultural traditions rather than biological factors. Yet in science, it is race that is often the flashpoint. To anthropologists and paleontologists, the question of when in prehistory races began to evolve is no less controversial. Wolpoff, Alan Thorne of the Australian National University and their colleagues would trace racial characteristics as far back as 2 million years ago, to the extinct human species Homo erectus. According to their so-called multiregional hypothesis (see The case against Eve, New Scientist, 22 June 1991), anatomically modern humans evolved from this more ancient form simultaneously in different parts of the world, and it was during this period of simultaneous evolution that the racial characteristics of Homo sapiens first emerged.
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6y ago
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14y ago

Yes. Africa is the birth place of the entire human race. Yes, that does mean that

Adam and Eve were black. It was recently proven that every single humans'

ancestry can indeed be traced to Africa.As the huminids (early humans)

migrated from Africa, and into another climate, their physical characteristics

changed during a long period of time. That would explain the different races in

the world.

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8y ago

No-one knows exactly. Fossils of ancient hominids have been found in places as far apart as Ethiopia, Sudan, Kenya, Chad, Tanzania and South Africa. Fossils are produced only rarely and their locations are constrained by geological history rather than paleontological significance. It depends where you draw the line between human and non-human as well. There is a lot of controversy about that. Do you count a hominid as human if it is one which walks approximately upright, or achieves a certain brain size or what?

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10y ago

The ancestry of every human alive today begins in eastern Africa. There, nearly 200,000 years ago, our species evolved. For the next 150,000 years or so, these early humans would remain within the confines of Africa, gradually separating into distinct populations. Then, sometime between 45 and 60,000 years ago, one of these populations made the giant leap out of Africa. Learn more at 23andme.com.

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13y ago

after and the flood in approximately 2,500 B.C

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14y ago

Yes it is a true fact so all rednecks can't make fun of africans

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12y ago

yes they are,because the first life was in africa

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8y ago

Because that is where the species first evolved.

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8y ago

Tanzania,

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Wiki User

12y ago

no.

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Q: Why did humans come from Africa?
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Related questions

Where do black humans come from?

Africa


Where did the early humans come from?

Africa.


Where did early humans come from?

Africa.


Where did the first humans come from (Region of the world)?

Africa


On which continent did humans originate?

Africa Humans first evolved in Africa, and much of human evolution occurred on that continent. The fossils of early humans who lived between 6 and 2 million years ago come entirely from Africa.


Where on earth did all humans come from?

Some place in Africa, probably the great rift valley.


Where do anthropologists believe all humans come from?

Anthropologists believe that all humans originated in Africa, specifically in the region of East Africa. This idea is supported by genetic and fossil evidence that suggests modern humans first evolved in this region before spreading out to populate the rest of the world.


What continent did early humans come from?

Early humans are believed to have originated in Africa. The earliest known hominids, such as Australopithecus afarensis and Homo habilis, have been found in various parts of Africa, supporting the theory that this is where human evolution began.


What regions had humans first?

All humans migrated out of South Africa.


Where did all humans come from?

Well some researchers say that ALL humans from Africa . So therfore People should not be racist , Because we came from the same place !


Scientists who argue that mordern humans evolved from a single population believe that humans came from the continent of?

Most scientists believe that humans originated in Africa.


Where did the ancestors of Africa come from?

Human ancestors in Africa evolved from earlier hominids that lived in the region. Modern humans, Homo sapiens, originated in Africa around 300,000 to 200,000 years ago. This is supported by fossil and genetic evidence.