Phylogeographic analysis of the Bantu language expansion supports a rainforest route

Author:

Koile Ezequiel12ORCID,Greenhill Simon J.13ORCID,Blasi Damián E.145ORCID,Bouckaert Remco6ORCID,Gray Russell D.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany

2. Linguistic Convergence Laboratory, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow 105066, Russia

3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

4. Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138

5. Human Relations Area Files, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520

6. Centre for Computational Evolution, University of Auckland, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

7. School of Psychology, University of Auckland, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

Abstract

The Bantu expansion transformed the linguistic, economic, and cultural composition of sub-Saharan Africa. However, the exact dates and routes taken by the ancestors of the speakers of the more than 500 current Bantu languages remain uncertain. Here, we use the recently developed “break-away” geographical diffusion model, specially designed for modeling migrations, with “augmented” geographic information, to reconstruct the Bantu language family expansion. This Bayesian phylogeographic approach with augmented geographical data provides a powerful way of linking linguistic, archaeological, and genetic data to test hypotheses about large language family expansions. We compare four hypotheses: an early major split north of the rainforest; a migration through the Sangha River Interval corridor around 2,500 BP; a coastal migration around 4,000 BP; and a migration through the rainforest before the corridor opening, at 4,000 BP. Our results produce a topology and timeline for the Bantu language family, which supports the hypothesis of an expansion through Central African tropical forests at 4,420 BP (4,040 to 5,000 95% highest posterior density interval), well before the Sangha River Interval was open.

Funder

BIN RAS | Russian Academy of Sciences

Marsden Fund

Branco Weiss Fellowship

Harvard Data Science Fellowship

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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