A PHOTO

nok-ind:

World’s languages traced back to single African mother tongue: scientists.

New Zealand researchers have traced every human language — from English to Mandarin — back to an ancestral language spoken in Africa 50,000 to 70,000 years ago.

Scientists say they have traced the world’s 6,000 modern languages — from English to Mandarin — back to a single “mother tongue,” an ancestral language spoken in Africa 50,000 to 70,000 years ago.

New research, published in the journal Science, suggests this single ancient language resulted in human civilization — a Diaspora — as well as advances in art and hunting tool technology, and laid the groundwork for all the world’s cultures.

The research, by Quentin Atkinson from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, also found that speech evolved far earlier than previously thought. And the findings implied, though did not prove, that modern language originated only once, an issue of controversy among linguists, according to the New York Times.

Before Atkinson came up with the evidence for a single African origin of language, some scientists had argued that language evolved independently in different parts of the world.

Atkinson found that the first populations migrating from Africa laid the groundwork for all the world’s cultures by taking their single language with them. “It was the catalyst that spurred the human expansion that we all are a product of,” Atkinson said, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Atkinson traced the number distinct sounds, or phonemes — consonants, vowels and tones — in 504 world languages, finding compelling evidence that they can be traced back to a long-forgotten dialect spoken by our Stone Age ancestors, according to the Daily Mail.

Atkinson also hypothesized that languages with the most sounds would be the oldest, while those spoken by smaller breakaway groups would utilize fewer sounds as variation and complexity diminished.

The study found that some of the click-using languages of Africa have more than 100 phonemes, or sounds, whereas Hawaiian, toward the far end of the human migration route out of Africa, has only 13, the Times reported. English has about 45 phonemes.

The phoneme pattern mirrors the pattern of human genetic diversity as humans spread across the globe from sub-Saharan Africa around 70,000 years ago.

Source: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/business-tech/science/110415/language-science-linguistics-mother-tongue-english-chinese-mandarin-africa

Reblogged from Ursa Major ♀
  1. imjustamonster reblogged this from nok-ind
  2. rachhhello reblogged this from nok-ind
  3. pajamaart reblogged this from nok-ind
  4. lt-slothrop reblogged this from peashooters-personal
  5. eat-your-kids reblogged this from bulletzombie
  6. motherfugging-fox reblogged this from combustspontaneously
  7. the-atom-to-your-molecule reblogged this from bulletzombie
  8. bulletzombie reblogged this from ograwthentic
  9. mishalawrence reblogged this from combustspontaneously
  10. combustspontaneously reblogged this from 105northtower
  11. lookdeepintotheparka reblogged this from the-ravenclaw-lannister
  12. ograwthentic reblogged this from jellyfoxtrot
  13. persephoneunder reblogged this from the-fisher-queen
  14. maakara reblogged this from liquiddittyfloats
  15. at221bbakerstreet reblogged this from liquiddittyfloats
  16. jrthur reblogged this from gorecoveredrampager
  17. frostneko reblogged this from vigwig
  18. sherlocks-scarves reblogged this from 105northtower
  19. the-fandoms-have-the-phonebox reblogged this from liquiddittyfloats
  20. redhavenonfire reblogged this from joelisprocrastinating
  21. megsy-wegsy reblogged this from 105northtower
  22. 105northtower reblogged this from liquiddittyfloats
  23. the-ravenclaw-lannister reblogged this from joelisprocrastinating
  24. joelisprocrastinating reblogged this from the1truematt
  25. jellyfoxtrot reblogged this from nightbringer24
  26. liquiddittyfloats reblogged this from the-fisher-queen
  27. reluctant-redcoat reblogged this from peashooters-personal
  28. crystagenesis reblogged this from amightydirge and added:
    Erm … no I don’t see how this research makes any sense at all. What evidence is there that languages with more phonemes...