Anthropology
Related: About this forumAn Unlikely Driver of Evolution: Arsenic
Around 11,000 years ago, humans first set foot in the driest place on Earth.
The Atacama Desert straddles the Andes Mountains, reaching into parts of Chile, Peru, Bolivia and Argentina. Little rain falls on the desert some spots havent received a single drop in recorded history.
But the people who arrived at the Atacama managed to turn it into a home. Some Atacameños, as they are known today, fished the Atlantic. Others hunted game and herded livestock in the highlands. They mummified their dead, decorating them with ceremonial wigs before leaving them in the mountains.
Those mummies reveal a hidden threat in the Atacama. When scientists analyzed the hair in 7,000-year-old mummy wigs, they discovered high levels of arsenic. Through their lives, the Atacameños were gradually poisoned.
Arsenic can poison people today through exposure to pesticides and pollution. But arsenic is also naturally present in the water and soil in some parts of the world. The Atacama Desert, sitting on top of arsenic-rich volcanic rock, is one of them. The concentration of arsenic in Atacama drinking water can be 20 times higher than the level considered safe for human consumption.
Now a team of scientists has discovered that the arsenic of the Atacama Desert didnt just make people sick. It also spurred their evolution.
In a new study in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, researchers report that over the years the Atacameños became more resistant to arsenic, thanks to natural selection. It is the first documented case of natural selection in humans for a defense against an environmental poison.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/13/science/an-unlikely-driver-of-evolution-arsenic.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=mini-moth®ion=top-stories-below&WT.nav=top-stories-below
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)thank you for posting..