Gene study reveals unknown human migration into South America as late as 720AD
Scientists have discovered traces of a genetic signature associated with Indigenous Australasians dating from China’s Tang dynasty

These new settlers carried genes remarkably similar to indigenous populations in what is now Australia and the Pacific Islands, according to the study published online by the journal Nature on April 22.
The researchers concluded that much of the ancestry found in modern Indigenous South Americans did not come primarily from the continent’s earliest settlers. The precise origin of these new migrants remained uncertain, they said.
The team stressed that the findings did not imply a direct migration from Australasia to South America but instead pointed to an ancient “ghost population” that contributed genetic ancestry to some indigenous groups in the Amazon.
For decades, scientists have believed that the Americas were populated through two major migration waves of ancestral groups that began roughly 15,000 years ago across a land bridge that once existed in the Bering Strait between today’s Alaska and Siberia.
