Talk:Southern Dispersal
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Original research
[edit]there seems to be no academic use of the term "Great coastal migration" per google scholar. The article should be deleted or redirected to the appropriate article —Preceding unsigned comment added by Wapondaponda (talk • contribs) 06:31, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- You're right, we should probably migrate it to "Coastal migration theory," "Coastal migration model" or simply "Coastal migration" : see http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=%22coastal+migration%22+andaman&btnG=Search or http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q="coastal+migration+theory" GCM shows up in discussions of haplogroups mtDNA M, YDNA C and YDNA D - http://www.dnaexplain.com/services.htm, http://jashan.org/mom_genographic, http://www.geinvestigations.com/dnaancestry.shtml, etc - but these are commercial genetic testers mostly, not scholarly articles. I created the article and just sort of stuck with the name. --Hunnjazal (talk) 15:21, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Update: Dropped the word great and moved the article to "Coastal Migration" plus added 3 (out of dozens of possible) academic references. Also changed the word "theory" in opening line to "concept" since it the word theory doesn't work in the New World extension - where it is more of a hypothesis/postulate. I also dropped the OR tag. Let me know if you disagree with any of this Wapondaponda. Thanks. --Hunnjazal (talk) 15:57, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- Looking through the references, none of them has in the title the term "coastal migration". Wapondaponda (talk) 05:50, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Update: Dropped the word great and moved the article to "Coastal Migration" plus added 3 (out of dozens of possible) academic references. Also changed the word "theory" in opening line to "concept" since it the word theory doesn't work in the New World extension - where it is more of a hypothesis/postulate. I also dropped the OR tag. Let me know if you disagree with any of this Wapondaponda. Thanks. --Hunnjazal (talk) 15:57, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
- That's easy enough to get - http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0277379100001153, http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/377651, http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/citation/263/5150/1088 - but where does it say that this needs to be in the title? Not in WP:OR. Clarify this or remove the tag. --Hunnjazal (talk) 07:07, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- The phrase "coastal migration" is used frequently. But it is a general phrase that means migrating along the coast. It does not have to be humans, it could be fish or other aquatic life. Most of the articles referencing "coastal migration" from google scholar are about fish. This is also a duplication of information from the single origin hypothesis and early human migration. The guidelines at WP:GNG state the sources should address the subject directly and no original research is required to extract the content. Wapondaponda (talk) 01:02, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- That's easy enough to get - http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0277379100001153, http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/377651, http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/citation/263/5150/1088 - but where does it say that this needs to be in the title? Not in WP:OR. Clarify this or remove the tag. --Hunnjazal (talk) 07:07, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Single origin hypothesis and early human migration are different topics (though related, so there should be some cross-referencing, which is good). Early human migration can refer to any early human migration rather than the coastal migrations involved in the first human spread. Similarly, single origin just means a single origin in Africa - it says nothing about the coastal migration theory. This is the exact and direct topic of many papers and a lot of research - and there are references aplenty, some of which are incorporated here. Easily complies with WP:GNG, which also doesn't say anything about titles, so you should clarify why you asked for that - even though that was also trivial to meet given the large focus on this in genetic and anthropological circles. There is zero original research here. This is a term that is used over and over again to mean a very specific thing - I don't control the academic community, so I can't help it if they're using this term. If it is also used for other things like fishes, all that means is create a disambiguation page, so I will ask you to {{sofixit}}. You should also do this for single origin hypothesis, since the origins of wildlife and various biological organs shows up more frequently at higher ranks than the human origin theory in Google scholar - http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=%22single+origin+hypothesis%22&btnG=Search. Incidentally, this article should become the right home for all the varieties of coastal migration approaches proposed, and their critiques. There is a tonne of interesting research here, and it is not definitive whether or how many of these migrations happened. For instance, what exactly happened in Beringia, when transit occurred to areas south of it in the Americas, and how Australia was populated, whether a land-bridge to the Andamans was involved or not, etc on the Asian side. All of this is contested and needs to be presented keeping NPOV firmly in mind. It's a lot of work that needs to be put into this for things that are important and very notable - and would be completely out of place in those other two articles. --Hunnjazal (talk) 10:03, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
North American migration
[edit]The Beringian migration to North America doesn't warrant prominence in this article because it wasn't a coastal migration. It was a gradual expansion of the range of hunters following following game animals that had nothing to do with the coast. The ice-free corridor hypothesis was proposed to explain evidence for migration of humans into North America during the last glacial maximum, presumed to be from out of Beringia, however, there is no evidence for such early development of an ice-free corridor. In any event, the ice free corridor hypothesis isn't even remotely about coastal migration.
More recent work indicates that the initial spread of humans into North America was a waterborne migration along ice-free archipelagos and coastal areas from the Kuriles to islands off the Alaskan coast. The archipelagos were much denser than they are now because of the lower sea level and they were habitable while ice-bound coastal areas were not. The spread of humans south via the island hopping route was extremely rapid and occurred while the way out of the Beringian-Alaskan plain was still blocked by ice. Genetic evidence links the first migrants to the Americas with aboriginal Japanese who migrated from the Altai region via the Amur River corridor by 20,000 B.P. Maritime skills had spread throughout coastal east Asia from Indonesia by that time.
It needs to be emphasized that the earliest dates from coastal archaeosites are at best minimum ages for the migration, because the first coastal sites were all submerged by the rise in sea level with deglaciation.
75.111.20.66 (talk) 09:34, 25 March 2015 (UTC)
- I've gone ahead and edited to clarify the distinction between the Beringia - ice-free corridor and coastal migration hypotheses while hopefully maintaining the non-POV Wikipedia standard, although evidence increasingly suggests that the inland migration south was at least a few thousand years behind the coastal migration.75.111.20.66 (talk) 02:02, 26 March 2015 (UTC)
External links modified
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New studies
[edit]Please look at the following new study. Add relevant info to article.--Nizil (talk) 13:49, 18 May 2017 (UTC)
- Blinkhorn, James; Ajithprasad, P.; Mukherjee, Avinandan (2017-05-16). "Did Modern Human Dispersal Take a Coastal Route into India? New Evidence from Palaeolithic Surveys of Kachchh, Gujarat". Journal of Field Archaeology. 0 (0): 1–16. doi:10.1080/00934690.2017.1323543. ISSN 0093-4690.
External links modified
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