Male-biased migration from East Africa introduced pastoralism into southern Africa.
Mário VicenteImke LankheetThembi RussellNina HollfelderVinet CoetzeeHimla SoodyallMichael De JonghCarina M SchlebuschPublished in: BMC biology (2021)
We propose that pastoralism in southern Africa arrived through male-biased migration of an East African Afro-Asiatic-related group(s) who introduced new subsistence and livestock practices to local southern African hunter-gatherers. Our results add to the understanding of historical human migration and mobility in Africa, connected to the spread of food-producing and livestock practices.