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Genetic Study Finds Two Ancient Routes to Australia 60,000 Years Ago

Analysis of 2,456 mitochondrial genomes supports two distinct migration routes to Sahul and aligns genetic dates with archaeological findings around 60,000 years ago.

  • Using an unprecedented dataset, the study published Friday in Science Advances analysed 2,456 mitochondrial genomes and found models aligned with a settlement date about 60,000 years ago in Sahul.
  • Genetic models historically assumed molecular-clock techniques favored a 'short chronology' , while Indigenous archaeological evidence and Aboriginal knowledge supported a 'long chronology', creating debate.
  • Both routes required extensive open-water crossings of around 100 kilometres, with one dispersal tracked via the Philippines and Sulawesi and another through Sunda, while a 1,700-year-old Iron Age burial on Sulawesi shows movement was not strictly one-way.
  • The findings bolster `this data supports a really deep heritage for these communities`, Farr said, and study authors support the long chronology linked to Indigenous communities of Australia and New Guinea.
  • Researchers are currently analysing hundreds of whole human genome sequences, while authors say ancient DNA recovery could test migration models, though molecular-rate uncertainty persists.
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Time Out Worldwide broke the news in on Wednesday, November 19, 2025.
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