Excerpt from an Abstract:
"Consistent with other studies, we found that North African and Near Eastern populations (including the Yemeni) generally have less Neanderthal ancestry than other western Eurasian populations. However, our ADMIXTURE results indicate that a subset of Yemeni samples from the Mahra governate share a very high level of ancestry (~85%) with a single Near Eastern component. Interestingly, these individuals have Neanderthal ancestry estimates that are greater than estimates from almost all Near Eastern and North African populations and are more consistent with estimates from European and South/Central Asian populations, suggesting that eastern Yemen may be an area of elevated Neanderthal introgression in the Near East. Greater sampling of Near Eastern populations is needed to better understand variation in Neanderthal ancestry and the site(s) where modern humans and Neanderthals interbred."
The subject matter of this study is Neanderthal ancestry, of course, but what's interesting to me is that they've noted a population from the Mahra Governorate of Yemen who, unlike other Arabians like the Yemenites farther westwards, have higher Neanderthal ancestry estimates that are closer to what one might expect from Europeans or South/Central Asians who are mostly of Out-of-Africa/Eurasian origins, lacking the noticeable Post-OoA African influences in various West Asian Arab and North African populations.
In my opinion, they've basically come across the "Mehri people" who, along with the likes of Soqotris like the girl in the picture above, have long interested some folks such as myself because of their phenotypic traits. They essentially look rather "Arabian" in regards to most of their traits but are, interestingly, very pigmented (dark-skinned) in many but not all cases. Arabic is also not their first language, they instead speak the "Modern South Arabian" languages which people should not confuse as being descendants of the "Old South Arabian" languages (i.e. Sabaean) or the likes of Himyaritic.
I've encountered people over the years who've fervently asserted that the pigmentation these peoples display is mostly owed to African admixture whilst using the seemingly, make what you will about his other ideas, very real Cushitic substratum in their languages discovered by Militarev [2] as an indicator that this might be the case. Yet, so far we've only gotten uniparental data on Soqotris which didn't imply that were very African influenced [3] and now we might just have some Mehri autosomal DNA on our hands which is also not proving consistent with African admixture.
Nevertheless, I've personally just looked upon them as looking like highly pigmented Arabians. Upon looking at their facial features, save for those who have recent outside admixture from Southeast African Bantu speaking people or Yemenite Arabs, I always got the impression that these folks looked quite similar to other Arabians like the Rashaida, they were just more pigmented on average and it seems my instincts may have been correct if these Mahra governorate samples are them.
Why are they this pigmented, then? Well, read this older post (as well as some links it shares) to get some of the dynamics behind pigmentation and you might get what's causing their pigmentation to be the way it is. Though, not all of them are as pigmented as the man or girl above, mind you. The two of them are meant to be "extreme examples" I've chosen for dramatic effect. These folks, nevertheless, have seemingly been isolated from the rest of the Arabian Peninsula for quite a long time (from a genetic perspective) so that likely has something to do with their looks as well.
I reached out to one of the authors of the forthcoming study but the thing is; it's still a forthcoming study/paper (all that's available right now is the abstract) and they've opted out of making the samples available to me or anyone else until the study's been published so we'll have to wait before we can fiddle with these new samples and really learn some mind-blowing stuff.
Reference List:
1. Neanderthal ancestry in Yemeni populations, Vyas et al.
2. Afro-Asiatic Migrations: Linguistic Evidence
3. Out of Arabia—The settlement of Island Soqotra as revealed by mitochondrial and Y chromosome genetic diversity, Černý et al.
"Consistent with other studies, we found that North African and Near Eastern populations (including the Yemeni) generally have less Neanderthal ancestry than other western Eurasian populations. However, our ADMIXTURE results indicate that a subset of Yemeni samples from the Mahra governate share a very high level of ancestry (~85%) with a single Near Eastern component. Interestingly, these individuals have Neanderthal ancestry estimates that are greater than estimates from almost all Near Eastern and North African populations and are more consistent with estimates from European and South/Central Asian populations, suggesting that eastern Yemen may be an area of elevated Neanderthal introgression in the Near East. Greater sampling of Near Eastern populations is needed to better understand variation in Neanderthal ancestry and the site(s) where modern humans and Neanderthals interbred."
The subject matter of this study is Neanderthal ancestry, of course, but what's interesting to me is that they've noted a population from the Mahra Governorate of Yemen who, unlike other Arabians like the Yemenites farther westwards, have higher Neanderthal ancestry estimates that are closer to what one might expect from Europeans or South/Central Asians who are mostly of Out-of-Africa/Eurasian origins, lacking the noticeable Post-OoA African influences in various West Asian Arab and North African populations.
A Soqotri girl |
In my opinion, they've basically come across the "Mehri people" who, along with the likes of Soqotris like the girl in the picture above, have long interested some folks such as myself because of their phenotypic traits. They essentially look rather "Arabian" in regards to most of their traits but are, interestingly, very pigmented (dark-skinned) in many but not all cases. Arabic is also not their first language, they instead speak the "Modern South Arabian" languages which people should not confuse as being descendants of the "Old South Arabian" languages (i.e. Sabaean) or the likes of Himyaritic.
I've encountered people over the years who've fervently asserted that the pigmentation these peoples display is mostly owed to African admixture whilst using the seemingly, make what you will about his other ideas, very real Cushitic substratum in their languages discovered by Militarev [2] as an indicator that this might be the case. Yet, so far we've only gotten uniparental data on Soqotris which didn't imply that were very African influenced [3] and now we might just have some Mehri autosomal DNA on our hands which is also not proving consistent with African admixture.
Supposedly a Mehri man |
Nevertheless, I've personally just looked upon them as looking like highly pigmented Arabians. Upon looking at their facial features, save for those who have recent outside admixture from Southeast African Bantu speaking people or Yemenite Arabs, I always got the impression that these folks looked quite similar to other Arabians like the Rashaida, they were just more pigmented on average and it seems my instincts may have been correct if these Mahra governorate samples are them.
Why are they this pigmented, then? Well, read this older post (as well as some links it shares) to get some of the dynamics behind pigmentation and you might get what's causing their pigmentation to be the way it is. Though, not all of them are as pigmented as the man or girl above, mind you. The two of them are meant to be "extreme examples" I've chosen for dramatic effect. These folks, nevertheless, have seemingly been isolated from the rest of the Arabian Peninsula for quite a long time (from a genetic perspective) so that likely has something to do with their looks as well.
I reached out to one of the authors of the forthcoming study but the thing is; it's still a forthcoming study/paper (all that's available right now is the abstract) and they've opted out of making the samples available to me or anyone else until the study's been published so we'll have to wait before we can fiddle with these new samples and really learn some mind-blowing stuff.
Reference List:
1. Neanderthal ancestry in Yemeni populations, Vyas et al.
2. Afro-Asiatic Migrations: Linguistic Evidence
3. Out of Arabia—The settlement of Island Soqotra as revealed by mitochondrial and Y chromosome genetic diversity, Černý et al.