Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

African roots of the human family tree

By Errol Barnett, CNN
May 14, 2013 -- Updated 1122 GMT (1922 HKT)
Professor Ron Clarke and his team at Wits University, South Africa, excavated "Little Foot" -- an "australopithecus" or kind of an ape-man that changed our understanding of pre-human evolution. Professor Ron Clarke and his team at Wits University, South Africa, excavated "Little Foot" -- an "australopithecus" or kind of an ape-man that changed our understanding of pre-human evolution.
HIDE CAPTION
Tracing mankind's ancestors
Tracing mankind's ancestors
Tracing mankind's ancestors
Tracing mankind's ancestors
Tracing mankind's ancestors
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Evidence suggests human beings started in Africa before migrating around the world
  • Archeological finds in South Africa suggest modern human behavior began in Africa
  • Advanced DNA testing can help you trace your ancestors

Every week, Inside Africa takes its viewers on a journey across Africa, exploring the true diversity and depth of different cultures, countries and regions. Follow host Errol Barnett on Twitter and Facebook.

Johannesburg, South Africa (CNN) -- How would you feel knowing you are related to your boss, your neighbor, or better yet your partner? Don't worry, you may have to go back 1,000, 20,000 or maybe even 100,000 years to find a common ancestor, but generally speaking it is true.

Advanced DNA testing combined with recently unearthed discoveries are bolstering the belief that if you look back far enough, all living human beings are the descendents of a small, innovative and ambitious set of people on the African continent.

With the mapping of the human genome in 2003, combined with thousands of people around the world submitting their DNA for testing, there's now mounting physical proof we all started in Africa before migrating around the world.

Geneticists are able to identify certain genetic sequences or "markers" in each of us and cross-reference it with a number of ever-growing international databases. Where there's a match, there's likely a common ancestor and genetically speaking, all markers point to Africa.

Tracing human origins
African beads rewrite the human story?
Reading your ancestry like a novel

Watch video: Tracing human origins

People take comfort in having their DNA tested, says Dr. Himla Soodyall. "It gives them some sense of grounding, some homing and some essence of understanding who they are," she says. Soodyall is the founder and director of the Human Genetics laboratory in South Africa's National Health Laboratory Services. She says she dedicated her life to this field of study because it reveals a much more fascinating story than most people realize.

I recently sat down with Soodyall to have my own DNA tested and its accuracy was astounding.

She explained all of us carry our mother's DNA signature within our mitochondria, so it houses "markers" only from our mother's lineage. My maternal marker turned out to be "H" which can be traced to a woman living in the Dordogne region of France 20,000 years ago.

But this isn't reserved for my British mother and me -- 47% of all Europeans are descendants from this haplogroup, which itself is an offshoot of humans who migrated out of Africa and into Europe.

Similarly, on my Jamaican father's side I expected an African connection due to the trans-Atlantic slave trade, in which the Caribbean was involved. Soodyall isolated DNA housed in my Y-chromosome, which only males carry. It revealed an "E3a" genetic marker common in 96% of people from Central West Africa.

What's more amazing was the discovery that certain sequences of my DNA matched up perfectly with a man from Zanzibar, Tanzania, and another from the Democratic Republic of Congo, who also had their DNA tested recently.

My family got a real kick out of hearing specifics related to our ancestry, but for me personally it underscored the reality that we really are one large, diverse and often dysfunctional human family. Ironically, what connects us all is the fact we really do want to understand more about our heritage; the only difference is how much people -- of any color -- are willing to admit their African roots.

Read this: Saving the African forest elephant

What makes us human is that we analyze our surroundings. We want to know how things work.
Professor Ron Clarke, Wits University, South Africa

Down along the scenic coastline of South Africa, Professor Christopher Henshilwood is digging up the anthropological proof of our human African origins. In the Blombos Cave, over the years he and his team have painstakingly unearthed beads likely used by humans on necklaces 75,000 years ago, bone tools dating back 80,000 years and the world's earliest known painting kit.

Because these findings are the oldest of their kind, it suggests our modern human behavior began in Africa and has been developing ever since. For example, the ancient "painting kit" contained red ochre and was likely used as body paint, just as the Himba people of Namibia use it today. Henshilwood says this symbolic behavior is what set humans apart. "It's the makeup people wear today ... the shoes we wear, the language we speak," he explains. "These are all sending out messages to the people around us about who I am, and where I come from."

Read this: Namibia's iconic red women

For the past century in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and South Africa, ancient fossils dating back millions of years continue to emerge suggesting a common ancestor for humans. "Lucy", "The Black Skull," "Twiggy" and "The Taung Child" respectively prove there were walking beings similar to humans in Africa before us Homo sapiens emerged.

Professor Ron Clarke of Wits University in South Africa recently took CNN deep inside the Sterkfontein Cave at the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site to expose one more example.

It was here he and his team unearthed the most complete skeleton of Australopithecus ever found. In very non-scientific terms, it can be described as a type of ape-man with anatomical similarities to the modern ape and the modern human. It is at least 3 million years old and Clarke, who has yet to publish some of his findings, says he was shocked when he realized what it was.

Whether people believe humans evolved from another species or that we all migrated out of Africa or not, one aspect of our human condition is undeniable, says Clarke. In a sentiment echoed by Soodyall and Hesnshilwood, Clarke says: "What makes us human is that we analyze our surroundings. We want to know how things work. When, why, where? And so one of the big questions is how did we become human?"

The search for answers continues...

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
September 27, 2013 -- Updated 1319 GMT (2119 HKT)
From bombs to drugs, humans have long relied on dogs' astonishing sense of smell. Now, they are also helping to combat poaching.
September 20, 2013 -- Updated 0947 GMT (1747 HKT)
Yoga is spreading across Kenya thanks to the Africa Yoga Project. Even the Maasai tribe is starting to embrace this practice from another culture.
September 18, 2013 -- Updated 1453 GMT (2253 HKT)
Nairobi National Park is a conservation park in a city, and it is now on the front lines in Kenya's human-wildlife conflict.
September 12, 2013 -- Updated 1209 GMT (2009 HKT)
They're cramped, loud and seem to care little about traffic rules. Riding a "tro-tro" is an experience that any visitor should check off their list.
September 11, 2013 -- Updated 1106 GMT (1906 HKT)
A few years ago these Maasai warriors hadn't held a cricket ball, let alone played in a competitive match, but now they have entered the game's most famous venue.
August 22, 2013 -- Updated 1112 GMT (1912 HKT)
Supporters of the Ghanaian national football team cheer in the stands in Accra 03 February 2008 during the 2008 African Nations Cup football match Nigeria vs Ghana.
Take a tour through the vibrant Ghanaian capital of Accra, as seen through the eyes of award-winning Nigerian author Chibundu Onuzo.
August 21, 2013 -- Updated 0920 GMT (1720 HKT)
Few African films have created as much buzz recently as "Of Good Report," a tale of a teacher who becomes obsessed with a 16-year-old female pupil.
August 15, 2013 -- Updated 0923 GMT (1723 HKT)
Meet the Malawi Mouse Boys, the gospel band who earn a living selling roasted mice kebabs.
August 5, 2013 -- Updated 0934 GMT (1734 HKT)
Chewbacca: A portrait of the
What's furry, has wings and looks like a Star Wars character? It's the "Chewbacca bat."
August 2, 2013 -- Updated 1005 GMT (1805 HKT)
Mahatma Gandhi, Archbishop Desmond Tutu. They're names you might associate with protest and peace ... less so skateboarding.
July 24, 2013 -- Updated 0944 GMT (1744 HKT)
Emeka, Jide and Emmanuel in the mud, Ekok Road, Cameroon
Every year a team of photographers embarks on a road trip in a bid to show the "real Africa."
July 11, 2013 -- Updated 0846 GMT (1646 HKT)
Two students have won a $25,000 prize for creating a mosquito-repellent soap in order to prevent malaria.
July 9, 2013 -- Updated 1054 GMT (1854 HKT)
Berber children swim in an irrigation pool on the side of a mountain in the village of Ait Souka on July 25, 2007 in Imlil district, Morocco. The irrigation pool gradually fills up during the day then is drained in the evening to supply crops and the village. The Berber people of the Atlas have a strong sense of family and each village will consist of a number of families ranging from five to around thirty or forty
The safaris are great and its beaches are fantastic, but if you want to soak up Africa's beauty, you should head to the top of its mountains.
June 27, 2013 -- Updated 0951 GMT (1751 HKT)
Visitors walk past Bete Giyorgis, also called St. George's Church, at the Lalibela holy sites on March 19, 2013 in Lalibela, Ethiopia. Lalibela is among Ethiopia's holiest of cities and is distinguished by its 11 churches hewn into solid rock that date back to the 12th century. Construction of the churches was begun by Ethiopian Emperor Gebre Mesqel Lalibela, who sought to create an alternative pilgrimage site after the Muslim occupation of Jerusalem. Lalibela was the capital of Ethiopia until the 13th century.
Lalibela's famous churches, carved from a single rock 900 years ago, attract tens of thousands of pilgrims annually.
Each week Inside Africa highlights the true diversity of the continent as seen through the mediums of art, music, travel and literature.
ADVERTISEMENT