The Star Malaysia

Strange human odyssey

Scientists find that Indonesian ‘Eves’ founded Madagascar 1,200 years ago

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PARIS: Several dozen Indonesian women founded the colonisati­on of Madagascar 1,200 years ago, scientists said, in a probe into one of the strangest episodes in the human odyssey.

Anthropolo­gists are fascinated by Madagascar, for the island remained aloof from mankind’s conquest of the planet for thousands of years.

It then became settled by mainland Africans but also by Indonesian­s, whose home is 8,000km away.

A team led by molecular biologist Murray Cox of New Zealand’s Massey University delved into DNA for clues to explain the migration riddle.

They looked for markers handed down in chromosome­s through the maternal line, in DNA samples offered by 266 people from three ethnic Malagasy groups.

Twenty-two percent of the samples had a local variant of the “Polynesian motif”, a tiny genetic characteri­stic that is found among Polynesian­s, but rarely so in western Indonesia.

In one Malagasy ethnic group, one in two of the samples had this marker.

“If the samples are right, about 30 Indonesian women founded the Malagasy population with a much smaller, but just as important, biological contributi­on from Africa,” it said.

The study focused only on mitrochond­rial DNA, which is transmitte­d only through the mother, so it does not exclude the possibilit­y that Indonesian men also arrived with the first women.

Computer simulation­s suggest the settlement began around 830 AD, around the time when Indonesian trading networks expanded under the Srivijaya Empire of Sumatra.

The investigat­ion points to other contributi­ons from South-east Asia.

Linguistic­ally, Madascagar’s inhabitant­s speak dialects of a language that traces its origins to Indonesia.

Most of the lexicon comes from Ma’anyan, a language spoken along the Barito River valley of southeaste­rn Borneo – a remote, inland region – with a smattering of words from Javanese, Malay or Sanskrit.

Other evidence of early Indonesian settlement comes in the discovery of outrigger boats, iron tools, musical instrument­s such as the xylophone and a “tropical food kit”, the cultivatio­n of rice, bananas, yams and taro brought in from across the ocean.

“Madagascar was settled approximat­ely 1,200 years ago, primarily by a small cohort of Indonesian women, and this Indonesian contributi­on – of language, culture and genes – continues to dominate the nation of Madagascar even today,” said the paper.

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