The Ancients

The First Arabians

51 min
Jan 18, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Dr. Pierre Zalua explores how ancient DNA research is revolutionizing our understanding of early human migration into Arabia and the Levant. The episode examines how climate shifts, archaeological evidence, and genetic analysis reveal that Arabia was populated in waves over 130,000 years, with the most significant settlement occurring around 7,000 years ago from Levantine populations moving southward.

Insights
  • Ancient DNA has fundamentally shifted population genetics from theoretical models to evidence-based migration timelines, revealing that early human populations experienced severe bottlenecks before expanding globally
  • Arabia's extreme climate conditions have destroyed most ancient DNA evidence, forcing researchers to rely on complementary methods including climatology, archaeology, and comparative modern DNA analysis
  • Modern Arabian populations derive primarily from Levantine ancestry mixed with later influences from Egypt, East Africa, and India, contradicting earlier theories of direct African migration
  • Cultural factors—migration patterns, marriage practices, settlement choices—directly shape genetic diversity within populations, meaning DNA alone cannot explain cultural or linguistic identity
  • The Natufians (14,000 years ago) represent the continuous ancestral link between ancient Levantine populations and modern inhabitants, surviving multiple climate crises through refuge areas
Trends
Shift from single-origin migration models to multi-directional population movement including back-migration into Africa during climate crisesIntegration of ancient DNA with climatology and archaeology as complementary methodologies when direct genetic evidence is unavailableRecognition that language spread and genetic ancestry are decoupled—linguistic dominance (e.g., Aramaic under Persian rule) doesn't correlate with genetic replacementUnderwater archaeology emerging as critical frontier for discovering submerged coastal settlements from 50,000-20,000 years ago as sea levels rose post-glacial periodRevision of human evolutionary timelines—homo sapiens now dated to 400,000 years ago versus previously assumed 150,000 years, driven by ancient DNA discoveriesGrowing evidence of multiple interbreeding events between homo sapiens and Neanderthals/Denisovans, contradicting earlier mitochondrial DNA-based assumptions of no mixingClimate-driven population cycles in arid regions creating episodic settlement patterns rather than continuous habitation, with 50,000-year gaps between occupation phases
Topics
Ancient DNA extraction techniques from petrous bones and molarsClimate reconstruction and paleoenvironmental analysis for migration modelingOut-of-Africa human migration patterns and timingNatufian culture and Neolithic transition in the LevantGenetic bottlenecks in early human populationsPopulation genetics and mutation rate calculationsNeanderthal-homo sapiens interbreeding evidenceArabian Peninsula settlement chronologyMesopotamian civilization ancestry (Sumer, Akkad, Babylon)Genetic ancestry versus cultural identitySemitic language spread and genetic correlationLast Glacial Maximum impact on human habitationAfrican Humid Period (14,000-6,000 years ago)Underwater archaeology and submerged settlement sitesModern Arabian genetic composition and regional variation
Companies
History Hit
Podcast network producing The Ancients; offers hundreds of hours of original documentaries on ancient history and arc...
Calipha University
Institution where Dr. Pierre Zalua holds position as Professor of Genetics; conducts ancient DNA research
People
Dr. Pierre Zalua
Professor of Genetics at Calipha University; expert in ancient DNA and population genetics; author of 'Ancestors' boo...
Tristan Hughes
Host of The Ancients podcast; conducted interview with Dr. Zalua on Arabian and Levantine population genetics
David Wright
Renowned ancient DNA specialist cited for Natufian DNA sample analysis and research contributions
Quotes
"Ancient DNA has transformed the way we look at population migrations and who populated which part of the world first. I would say, a paradigm shift in the way we do population genetics."
Dr. Pierre Zalua
"The challenge I have to just put it here is Arabia because of the heat and because of the conditions where the remnants of humans in the desert actually extracting DNA from human remains has been extremely challenging."
Dr. Pierre Zalua
"DNA is only a thread about these cultures. It tells you how these cultures moved, but it doesn't tell you anything about these cultures. We talk about languages, lifestyles, habits, rituals."
Dr. Pierre Zalua
"We should not limit a culture to a DNA test, should not limit identities to a DNA test. Roots is not a word to be used for humans, maybe certain plants. But origin is something that you carry with you as a human being."
Dr. Pierre Zalua
"It's not always a linear approach. It's very complex interactive approach, and you have to come to the idea that it's not going to be an easy answer."
Dr. Pierre Zalua
Full Transcript
Ever wondered why the Romans were defeated in the Chutaburg forest? What secrets lie buried in prehistoric Ireland? Or what made Alexander truly great? With a subscription to History Hit, you can explore our ancient past alongside the world's leading historians and archaeologists. You'll also unlock hundreds of hours of original documentaries with a brand new release every single week covering everything from the ancient world to World War II. Just visit historyhit.com-subscribe. Changes in sexual performance are more common than most people realize and support doesn't need to feel awkward. With MedExpress, everything happens privately online. Start by completing a short consultation reviewed by UK-registered clinicians. If eligible, treatment is delivered discreetly to your home with ongoing support whenever you need it. You're not alone in this. Visit medexpress.co.uk-podcast to learn more. Arabia. At the dawn of human history, this vast and dramatic landscape became a gateway to the wider world. The story of the first Arabians begins with the earliest homo sapiens to migrate out of Africa. Today is an especially exciting time. Thanks to ground-breaking advances in ancient DNA research, that are illuminating the complex and fascinating journey of our ancestors. In this episode, we'll explore how genetics can help us understand the connections between those first homo sapiens who arrived in Arabia and modern day populations. We'll also look at what life might have been like for those early human communities living in Arabia more than 50,000 years ago. This is the ancients. I'm Tristan Hughes your host, and this is the story of the first Arabians. Our guest today is Dr. Pierre Zalua, Professor of Genetics at Calipha University. Pierre, it is such a pleasure to have you on the podcast and to be doing it in person welcome. Thank you, actually. We've met three years ago. Two years ago, and then I'm happy that we finally made it. We met at an archaeological conference in Saudi Arabia of all places. If it was fitting for today's topic on the first Arabians, but also the first homo sapiens in the wider region as well, because you've just written a brand new book, Ancestors, all about the history of the Levant, or the Levant as well, with DNA and exploring the stories of these earliest people to these areas of the world. Is it a really exciting time with new scientific developments? I think ancient DNA has transformed the way we look at population migrations and who populated which part of the world first. I think ancient DNA was, I would say, a paradigm shift in the way we do population genetics. And no wonder that Papos Fante got Nobel Prize for it. I mean, it's really, it's transformed the way we look at human migrations. And in a lot of places actually, it made huge impact and it made major discoveries that made us change our ideas or our theories about when and how human migrated out of Africa. The challenge I have to just put it here is Arabia because of the heat and because of the conditions where the remnants of humans in the desert actually extracting DNA from human remains has been extremely challenging. Right. And today I will tell you that that has not been a maybe apart from a couple of samples, no DNA beyond 5,000 years have been able, we have not been able to get any DNA out of samples that are more than a few thousand years old from Arabia, from the entire Arabia. So is it a huge challenge? It's a huge challenge and is that in contrast to places a bit further north like the Levant where you have more human bones today? Exactly. Exactly. So, in the Levant and in Northern Levant in the Caucasus even and in Iran, the Zagras Mountains and in Anatolia, we've had ample, ample DNA samples and that's why the story is so exciting up to the point where we get to Arabia. But we have other tools at our disposal that will, that have given us ideas about when Arabia is populated and how Arabia is populated, etc. So, but until we get ancient DNA and I'm hoping we will, I mean we're trying so hard and actually from that visit that you and I had colleagues there that trying to actually get some good quality DNA out of the samples that they have, but still today we have not been able to get that. You are a brilliant geneticist and can you explain us a bit more of the process behind how you would try to extract ancient DNA from these remains? So ancient DNA, so every single cell of our body or the skeleton supposedly as DNA. But with time cells get very porous and then if there's no collagen to keep the bones together, you lose a lot of the skeleton of the cell itself and DNA is no longer there. So you need some form of skeleton to fix the DNA to it. So we basically use certain parts of the skeleton, namely the teeth and the molar precisely because if you can actually drill within the molar part, you can actually extract DNA and you hope that there is DNA inside. So that's one part that we can get DNA from, but most recently, and I say recently over the last five years or so, we discovered that the petrous bone, which is a yes, which is below the ear, right at the end of the mandible, it's very thick. It's actually one of the thickest, if not the thickest, bone in the body because it's thick, it actually can withstand a lot of heat and a lot of, you know, climatic changes, et cetera. And we can actually extract DNA from. And that's what most scientists have been successful with is extracting the DNA from petrous bones. And actually this was a major shift in the way we extract DNA. So basically you grind that bone and then when you grind that bone, you basically you dissolve all the material into an equis phase and then liquid phase and then you get the DNA out and you analyze the DNA. And how can you then use that DNA to track prehistoric migrations of people that in some cases occur tens of thousands of years ago? Well, I think the beauty of ancient DNA is because you can archeologically date because you can carbon date and use other methods to actually date that material. So we know exactly using ancient DNA or ancient material is how all the material is. So that's something that we have now. For example, when you discover Neanderthal DNA, which is a very old DNA, so from other methods you can actually date that skeleton or those remains and you can actually put a date to it and then when you extract the DNA, you now know that people who lived a hundred thousand years ago or fifty thousand years ago, this is what their DNA looked like and you compare it to what the DNA looked like today. And then you can actually look how much did the change in fifty thousand years ago knowing that knowing what we know from science is yes, DNA changes every generation. But it's like a clock. We know exactly the changes that actually can happen through time. And by don't this comparison, we will be able to know if this change is actually a normal timeline change or if something else happened to these people today, disappear or the people living today are the direct descendants of these skeletal remains. Pierre, it is such a fascinating scientific fear, but I must admit I'm someone who doesn't have a big scientific background at all. So I'm loving learning more about this. If we go back to Arabia and you've highlighted how it's more tricky learning more about the earliest people populating Arabia because of the temperatures, I mean, if to learn more therefore about that, what are the methods to have to use alongside ancient DNA? Okay. So let's discuss first, why do people move? Okay. So why did our ancestors leave Africa? Okay. Well, they need better, you know, better place to live because either heat was too much or the hunting grounds were actually, you know, getting they shrunk, etc. So they said, so they go from one environment to another because to survive. So people move throughout history, they've been moving throughout history to seek better climate, better places to hunt, better places to live, etc. So why would actually people move into Arabia? And that's that's the question that we that we had. So I would say throughout the last, you know, 100,000 years, the climate was the main driver for human migration. So you have to look at climate maps and see how did Arabia look like 50,000 years ago? How did Arabia look like 100,000 years ago? How does Arabia look like today? And so it's extremely important for us to understand how the area looked, how the area behaved, you know, how was the environment in that area before we can actually say, well, human lived or didn't live. So this is a huge element that we need in place first. So looking at climate shifts, looking at was it wet? Did it actually, did it have enough green pastures for actually people to live for animals to graze and then, you know, you need, so when we talk to the humans, you need, you know, subsidies for humans as well, right? I mean, you need the animals that they hunt, you need the plants that they eat, etc. So that's extremely important. So climateology or the science of environmental changes is extremely important. That's one aspect that we look at. So the second aspect is archaeology, you know, is there any archaeological remain that actually can tell us that human did, in fact, live in that place? The problem with Arabia is that we see some evidence of human presence, 130,000 years ago, maybe 110,000 years ago. But then because of the climate, because of the shift in climate, then the area was no longer inhabited. So people actually escaped. And when they escaped, either they moved long distances, went back to Africa or they went up north or they live in refugee. And usually these refugees from what we know today have been around the Gulf area. So close to the water. Okay, so like the Gulf of Aden or the Persian Gulf today. The Persian Gulf. Exactly. So basically we know that people move to these areas and they shrink. I mean, these areas, live, live, live areas, they shrink so much because of the climate. And of course, we have the, you know, glacial ages, right? I mean, the last glacial, the last glacial that happened 25,000 years ago to 18,000 years ago, this is the last glacial maximum that you talk about. It was also a major player and we'll talk about it. Because during that period, Arabia was not a place where you can actually sustain life. So these fluctuation that happened. So if we talk about, let's go back to 130 to 110,000 years ago. And then for the long period of time, Arabia was not populated because people cannot live there. And perhaps, you know, around I would say 65,000 to 50,000, there has been a cooling area in there, more humid. And we have evidence that some people may have lived there. Okay. But then soon after that came the last glacial maximum and then the entire population disappeared up until I would say 6,000 years ago, where we call it the African humid period, which actually, you know, anywhere between 14 to 6,000 years, that's when Arabia was mostly populated, I would say around 7,000 prior to today. We see a, I would say, the largest number of people moved into Arabia based on the archaeological evidence that we have. So if we're going to talk about when was Arabia populated, I would say my guess would be around that time, 7,000 years ago started to see strong evidence of populations that actually remain. One thing I have to mention as well is after the ice melted, around 18,000 years ago, what happened to the Persian Gulf, what happened to the sea level, it rose significantly. So those people, the ancient people who actually may have lived around there, what happened to them, they're under water now. So that's why it's very hard to find these archaeological remains from 50,000 years ago or 20,000 years ago if they exist because they're under water. So hopefully one day we can actually have underwater archaeology and then discover those. Some have now started to being discovered. I know the evidence is more sensitive, but I hope you don't mind if we go before 7,000 years ago right now with these earlier. I don't know if I want to say unsuccessful but more temporary occupations of people in Arabia. So you mentioned that evidence from 130, 120,000 years ago. So do we have these brief moments which seems like there is human occupation in Arabia earlier on? These are based purely on certain archaeological findings and no humans. Actually they have not been able to find human remains. Right. The archaeology actually is telling that these may have been occupied and the problem is, again, as I said, we have not been able to find human remains up until 7,000 or 6,000 prior. And we are working, I am with some collaborators that we're working on, some of these remains. So far we're not very successful, but we are pushing on that. So it's really hard to pinpoint the evidence right now of these ancient, ancient people who actually lived. I think as we do more archaeological studies, underwater archaeology studies, we will find a number of sites across the Persian Gulf where we can actually see remnants of these ancient populations. And is this also important to highlight? Because I know you also have done a lot of work on the Levant where there is the presence of Neanderthals and of early homo sapiens together. Do we not think that Neanderthals made it into Arabia? Do we think that the Levant is almost the cut off point? It's a very difficult question to answer because we don't have any… Yes, it's you. But the most likely path is this Sinai up to the Levant where Neanderthals lived for a very long time, moved into Europe. And we know there is strong evidence now that most likely they… the first interaction between… or the first cross between Neanderthals and homo sapiens. It's interbreeding. Interbreeding happened in the Levant and perhaps happened more than once. So we know for a fact that they existed together at some point in the Levant. Now how did the Neanderthals got there? Yes, I mean, you can argue that they may have also come through the Babylonmendab. You have to realize that through Babylonmendab in Yemen, they could cross it. You don't need to… I mean, the water was so shallow there, so people cross. And the Sinai was very different back then. I mean, you know, you can actually cross it much easier than today. It was not all that desert like today. And again, as we learn more about how people move, this one auto-Africa migration is no longer sustainable. I mean, I think, you know… And one thing I have to also mention is, we don't talk about migration. Back migration also played a huge role. People moved out of Africa, but a lot of people moved back into Africa. And so a lot of movement happened over the last 50,000 years. During the last glacial maximum, people escaped the Levant, escaped Arabia. And I won't be surprised actually, we have evidence to show that they actually moved back into East Africa and some other parts of Africa. The Natuphians, which we'll talk about, we believe that after the Younger Dries, which is a very cold period that happened around 11,000 years ago, the population of Natuphians who lived in the Levant strunk, and some of them may have actually escaped. Some of them went north, but others actually went south, and perhaps crossed back into Africa to escape. Because we see material culture that in the Natuphian culture, that is more impacted by Africa, whether because they interacted with them or whether they have actually moved there and interacted with them in Africa and they brought them back. So really, we have to think about, you know, it's not always one direction of movement, it's actually, you know, it's a corridor back and forth. Imagine winning the Euro millions, 14 million pound jackpot. On Friday the 13th, or even becoming one of our 13 guaranteed UK millionaires, you'd laugh in the face of luck. Friday the 13th will be lucky for some. Yes! Euro millions from the National Lottery play on it. Estimation jackpot account terms, rules and procedures applied. Glays must be 18 or over. Dried from his car at gunpoint in Syria, British photojournalist John Cantley vanished into the dark heart of ISIS. I'm Manvin Rammer, an Al-Podcast series, Last Man Standing with a Times Special Correspondent, Anthony Lloyd, investigates John Cantley's disappearance and inspired the gripping new BBC TV documentary, Hostage. Listen to the investigation that started it all. Search for Last Man Standing and you'll prefer Podcast app. As the saying goes, if these walls could talk, and on the Betwix the Sheets podcast, we make it our business to discover what happened behind closed doors and even more importantly, in the bedrooms of people all throughout history. Kings, Queens, Mistresses, Servants and everyone in between. We also get up close and personal with medieval Afro-Dizziacs, lethal Victorian makeup routines, and look at the scandalous lives of beloved children's authors. Nothing is off limits. In other words, it's the best bits of history, with me, Dr. Kate Lister. Listen to Betwix the Sheets, the history of sex, scandal and society, twice a week, every week, wherever it is that you get your podcasts. Brought to you by the award-winning network, History Hit. If we can focus quickly, also on those out of Africa migrations, PR node on a lot of work around this as well, can you tell us how they relate to those early groups of homo sapiens going into Arabia? And then, as you mentioned, they ultimately some of them retreat back into Africa. But can you explain how DNA is making us rethink the nature of those migrations into Arabia at that time? So the reason the 50,000 years out of Africa migration has been highly documented because we have strong archaeology and we have also strong DNA to show. We can time that migration through DNA mutations that happened. And the fact that, you know, now homo sapiens, you know, initially we thought, you know, when I first started to study population genetics, the whole idea was like, we are 150,000 years old. Of course, now we pushed that to 400,000 years. We think some homo sapiens actually are 400,000 years old now. And again, because of ancient DNA that made us change these theories. But the most striking idea is that the population in Africa shrunk so much during that time that those who actually migrated out of Africa were very few. And we're talking maybe in the thousands, maybe few thousands only. And that's why we're not as genetically diverse as you would expect if we were evolving without the spottle neck through 400,000 years ago, we would be a lot more diverse than we are today. So this is what DNA is telling us. So DNA tells us these stories that we shrunk and then we expanded again when we left Africa. So and then from that point on, when you study people today, you compare their DNA and you can actually tell how many generations passed through mutations that we calculate. So we know that if we say a generation is 25 years, so we expect certain changes based on DNA mutations. And then we can calculate and figure out when the mutation appeared. So we start actually understanding when people moved, how they moved, and who moved to certain places and who established those places. And once we start looking at populations living today, we start actually constructing reverse engineering. We actually start to say, oh, this group who lives in the Levant today, we know where they come from. Because we have ancient DNA from people in situ, in specific places, we can compare this ancient DNA to modern DNA and say, is this a likely descendant? And that's how we do it. So we compare ancient DNA to modern DNA. And we do the calculation of time by generation. And we can tell, for example, in the Levant, we know that the Levant, the modern day Levant, is made of mostly three or at the most four major genetic components. In other words, who are the ancestral populations of the Levant? We know that the Natufians who lived in the Levant 14,000 years ago were actually the original, or the, in fact, the first inhabitants of the Levant, that are continuously present until today. And then these people were mixed from the Neolithic Anatolian, talking 12,000 years, 12 to 8,000 years, who came from Anatolia. And then we also know that from the Zauros mountains, you know, the foot, the foot hill of the Iran's mountain. They also came into the Levant. And that's how the Levant is actually populated. And I'll continue the story. So from that point on, because of climate, we understand how climate was, we understand also that, yes, the Levant at that point was sustainable for having people in. And then we have evidence now that these people migrated south into Arabia. So Arabia is actually heavily populated by ancient Levantine populations. So if you think about Arabia, modern Arabia was not populated from Africa. I know it was populated from the north. This is what ancient DNA is actually making us correct what we didn't know before. And then that's how we, that's how we do it. The reason I ask also is that because I know, as you mentioned, no remains before 7,000 years ago. So it is much more tricky in Arabia. But I've got on my notes things like the gate of tears and how with early successful migrations of humans out of Africa, that it seems likely that they went along the Arabian coast. And although it wasn't enduring there because ultimately they have to leave Arabia when the climate gets much worse, as you mentioned, some 23,000 years ago. Because of that, I mean, do we therefore have any sense, any idea of how those early communities lived in Arabia and how they got to Arabia? Just anything about their language. Yes. So when we talk about Babylon, or gate of tears, is most likely Arabia, ancient Arabia, not the one that we know today was populated most likely from the gate of tears, from Babylon. And as I said, that is where, where is that? This is Yemen. This is Yemen. It's just the, you know, it's across. So Eritrea, Ethiopia, and you know, and you will. Thank you. So basically, the most likely scenario is it's ancient Arabia was populated through that route. But also other people tracked even more eastward. And that's how they populated the, you know, east Asia, up to Australia. But what we know of these ancient people who actually came to Arabia, not very much, because the climate changed so much in Arabia, that I would say some of these early cultures, who were actually hunter-gatherers, of course, they lived in very small communities, and they lived close to the water. And then as the last glacial period happened, with the ice melting around 80,000 years ago, these communities actually either escaped or went underwater. That's why we still haven't discovered those people yet. I think, as I said earlier, we will get to know more about this when we do, you know, some underwater archeology. And I think we're going to get there soon. So after that, Arabia was dry for a long time, up until, as I said, the last, we call it the African-American. The African-human period, which started to happen around 14,000 years ago, and then it peaked around eight to 7,000 years ago in Arabia, and then that's when Arabia was populated again. And do we see, and so the people are coming at that time, they're coming from many different places, including the Levant, do we think? Well, this is what I think, and I could be wrong, but this is what, so far, the DNA that I've worked with have told us is, yes, most of modern Arabians that we see today have a huge DNA component from the Levant, and that region. Of course, you also have the Iranian component as well, present, you have the Natufian present as well, and importantly, you have two other components into modern Arabia. One from East Africa, you see it? You see another one from Egypt. There's a lot of common lineages between Egypt and Arabia, and you see from the East through Dilmun, the Bahrain interaction with the East, with the Indian trade, and all of this. But these last three are more recent. So Egypt, East Africa, and India were much more recent. Whereas the Levant input was much older than this to Arabia. So if I'm going to say, you know, the population of Arabia today, I would say, yes, Levantine, mostly Egypt, East Africa, and some part of India. Thank you for letting me ask so many questions about the three 7,000 years ago. I do appreciate it, but I love exploring that kind of deep, ice-h story of its old. But does it therefore seem that by 8,000, 7,000 years ago, there is quite a population boom in Arabia at that time. Around 7,000 years ago, we believe there was a population boom, and that's what we see today. I mean, these are the people who actually survived over the last 7,000 years, although, although, if you look at Arabia today, and compared it to 7,000 years ago, of course, it was a much different place. I mean, it was, you had much greener places in Arabia than what you see today. Yes, what do we know about the environment at that time? You know, there's still small communities, as I said, you don't see very large communities, and mostly around places where you have water. Of course, there were a lot of lakes present, so they were more nomadic, and actually they kept the name. We believe the name Arabia, which is also a term that needs to be studied extensively. It's described nomadic people who live in Arabia. So I think that's how these people live. They moved around these lakes, around places where there is water, and the remnants of those are these oasis that you still have today in Arabia. So I was actually going to ask my next question, was when do we think that the people who then hope later Arabia, of course, massive landmass, mean, when do they become more sedentary? I mean, do they bring farming with them? But it doesn't seem like it's a straightforward answer to that. Yes, it's not a straightforward answer to that. Absolutely not. I think the nomadic lifestyle of Arabia has dominated most of the last three, four millennia. You know, they moved from one place to another. You know, after 6,000 years, actually, Arabia started to become more arid and more desert up until today. So yes, people, their movement, were a bit difficult. They moved with difficulty because of sustainable land actually strong. And I think they lived nomadic life for the last few millennia. And some of them still do today. You know, these caravans that we talk about, that we all learned about, they were only recent. You also mentioned in passing earlier, and it's invomant in the story, the story of the Natufians. Now, can you explain who they are and how they relate to the story of Arabia by this time a few thousand years ago? So the Natufians, the name of Natufians, come from the valley of Natuf, widened Natuf, which is in Jordan. This is where actually the late period of Natufian were. So the Natufians are the earliest cultures that we know of in the Levant, anywhere between 12 and 14,000 years ago. And they lived, we can start seeing, I mean, they lived in many caves, of course, and maybe some early, early community life of the Natufians. The difficulty that we have with the Natufians today is we don't have too many samples to look for. I mean, most of what we know comes from half a dozen samples that have actually been sampled successfully. And most data comes from David Wright, who is a very famous ancient DNA specialist as well. So these are the people who lived in the Levant. They occupied parts of Syria, modern day Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan. And then after the younger dryness happened, you know, 11,000 years where you have this major climate shift, they split. We believe that they split. Some went south, further south, and perhaps they reached Africa, and some went further north. But they shrunk in size because of the climate. They shrunk so much. And then after when the climate changed again, then they spread again. And while they were spreading, at the same time, people were coming down from the Caucasus, from the Anatolian plains and from the Zagros. So as people expanded because the climate got better after the Las Galatial Maximum, and they started mixing. So we see evidence of mixing between the Natufians and the Neolithic Anatolians and the people coming from Iran, from the Zagros Mountains. And that's what constituted the Levant today, that we know today. And then part of the southern Natufians that actually escaped, we believe that actually led to most of the inhabitants of Arabia. So we think that, yes. But they also mixed from the Northern Levantine as well. So, and this is still up in the air. It's not 100% solid, but this is what the early evidence is showing us. And so following 7,000 years ago, do you as a geneticist and your team, do you have more information available for learning more, as you mentioned there, with like the Natufian link, for instance, about the makeup of these early populations in Arabia? I guess it's still the Stone Age at that time, or deep in prehistory, but less than 7,000 years ago. Yes. So again, Arabia, prior to 7,000 years ago, very, very limited evidence, archaeological or other that exist in Arabia. The Levant, of course, we had a lot more. I think the Levant, we see continuous populations over the last 7,000 years, and perhaps more. Of course, the Levant, because of the climate, and because of the topography of the Levant and Anatolia, a lot more refuge were there, and people actually could escape and stay in these refuge when the weather was bad, unlike Arabia, where you could not find serious refuge to go. And as I said, you know, because after 7,000 or 6,000 years ago, the land became more arid and more desertly like. Do we have some, after that time, do we have more examples from the prehistoric Arabian population? So 6,000, 5,000, 4,000 years ago, so we can learn much more about this? Yes. So, well, I would say, let's talk maybe 5,000, 5,000 and 4,000 years ago. And this is where we start seeing the evidence right now. Arabia has not been studied extensively, archaeologically. It's now been, you know, I would say over the last maybe 5,000 to 7 years, where a lot of activities have been going on and Alola as a site. But it's much later than this, Alola, we're talking the Nabateian, and this is much recent. So we know more about this, and frankly, what I know about this is much more recent than the 7,000. So I couldn't tell much about, you know, prior to these people who actually lived in Arabia. We still won't know. Right in the 13th, we'll be lucky for some! Yes! You're a million from the National Lottery Play on it. Estimating to Jackpot, I count terms, rules and procedures, and players must be 18 or over. Join Midnight Casino and discover our whole new world! With hot slots, Jackpots, live casino roulette and Blackjack at the ready. Come and play your way, get 100 free spins when you spend 20 pounds on eligible games. Search Midnight Casino, or download the Midnight app today. Midnight Casino Donbettah, you decide. New customers only, restrictions and TNCs apply. 18 plus, BeGumbleAware.org So Pierre, of course, we're covering a huge geographic region with Arabia, you know, several modern countries today. I mean, how do we think the whole region was ultimately populated? What do we know about that? Yes. I think one of the most important things to note here is, we believe a lot of things happened in the region, really the first communities that existed were, you know, in the Euphrates, in Mesopotamia, right? I mean, we're not too far. The first, how Christians come to the first, how Christians come to the first. Yes, the first, how Christians come to the first. Exactly. So the first community is the first cities, you know, the first real populations, as we call them, populations actually, they started there. So this region has been continuously populated over the last 7,000 years, which makes it a fascinating region. So when you approach and you want to study this region, you have to look at this massive shifts of populations and cultures, and you say, you know, how am I going to decipher, you know, all of this by looking at modern DNA today, and it's really, it's a puzzle, it's a huge puzzle. So if we think about it, so if we go back 7,000 years ago, or a bit earlier during the Neolithic time, and the agricultural expansion, let's put it this way. So let's talk, let's talk 8,000 to 9,000 years, when actually people started to leave their hunter-gatherer styles into small communities and agricultural expansions and start farming. So this happened in the fertile crescent, this happened in Mesopotamia. And who were the cultures that actually lived there back then? So there were very few of them. And as I said earlier, these actually were the people who lived in the Zagros, mountains at the foot of the Zagros, these people who lived in Anatolia, and the Natufians. So this is how it all started. So these are the people who actually were the ancestors of the Sumerians, the first city in the world, right? As we call it, you know, 3,100 years ago, 100 BC. So these are the original cultures that actually led to the people who live today. I mean, all of us. So you have Sumer that started around 3,100, and then after Sumer then came the Acadians. And the Acadians came somewhere from Northern Euphrates, perhaps more from, you know, West Asia, perhaps the Levant. They were Semitic people. The Acadians were Semitic people, and they came and they took over, and they destroyed, well, they dominated the Sumer. And then after that, you know, you had so many different cultures that actually fought. You had the Babylonians, right? You had the Assyrians. And so all of these people actually that moved in that region make our work extremely difficult to understand. But at the end of the day, when you do the analysis, you see that all of these actually came from these three distinct original cultures, which I think fascinating. If I continue through that, so if we go from, you know, what happened to the Babylonians, then, you know, you have the, you know, Assyrians and the Neu Assyrians that they actually came, and they took over, Neu Assyrians actually took over the entire region up until North Egypt. So they had a major presence. So when all these cultures actually dominate, you still, you say, you know, what am I doing now? 5,000 years later, what am I doing? How can I actually decipher all of this? So it's not, it's not an easy task. So when I did my work on, and I say, identity and the Levant, identity and the A&A and the Levant, it's just, I'm trying to figure out, you know, who are these people, you know, and when did they arrive and where did they come from? So it's really fascinating when you start putting archaeology, history, and genetic together to understand our ancestry, and that's what's fascinating about all of this. So you have to think, and you have to put in perspective, you know, that, you know, it's not always a linear approach. It's very, you know, complex interactive approach, and you have to come, you know, come to the idea that it's not going to be an easy answer. It's not going to be a simple linear answer. It's a very complex topic, and you've highlighted the wider region there, of course. And I'm guessing you do, so it filters into Arabian populations as well. That's right. I mean, you know, part of, if we look at Mesopotamia, and if you look at Iran, I mean, if you go south, I mean, that's where you are, you have Yemen, and you have Arabia, right? I mean, this interaction, it's a continuum. We don't know if actually people moved from Arabia into Iran or from Iran into Arabia, and I think we're seeing both, we're seeing this interaction, ancient until today, and when we talk ancient, we're talking 7,000 years. I'm presuming that you've also looked at DNA from people who live in Arabia today. Do you notice significant differences in the genetic, is it the ancestry, I guess, of people, let's say, from Yemen compared to Iran, and so on, is that also an interesting component to look at? Yes, so when you do, when you do DNA analysis on modern people who live in Arabia or in any region, there's something you have to really understand is that culture actually makes an impact on how our DNA is. In other words, so what you choose to do in your life, where you migrate, where you move, who you marry, makes your DNA different. So if you migrate into an area where nobody lived before as a small group, and you grow, your DNA is going to look very different than the initial group, because actually you're actually breathing within a very small group. So culture actually, in that sense, changes the way the DNA is going to look like. And this is something that we don't often think about. So when you tell me that, you know, if you take the genes or the genomes or the genetic makeup of people who lived in Yemen versus people who lived in Jeddah, for example, so the Arabia, yes, you're going to find differences because there is a geographical barrier, you know, these people have been living together for a long time. But if you take it a step further or if you take it a step deeper than this, no, the changes are not very different. So yes, you could see some changes that are modern changes, that are new changes that you can actually describe, but the stock remains remains the same. And it has descended from those prehistoric migrations to maybe thousands of years ago. You could see them. That's an amazing line then, down to the present day. Lots of the science sometimes goes over my head, but you've explained lots of it brilliantly in understanding the kind of story of this early populating of this such an important crucial region of Southwest Asia. Is there anything else you'd like to highlight that we really should talk about with these earliest populations in Arabia? And I guess if you want the wider region that we should think about when looking at ancient DNA and other fields today. Well, I think it's important to understand that people moved a lot. And it's also important to understand that there's not going to be a single story about human populations. I think there's going to be many, many stories. And these stories, I would say, will change because science will change. What we understand today is based on what we've learned, but then maybe 10 years from now, new evidence comes and then it will change the way we understood things. We keep on changing many things. As I said earlier, you know, we thought homo sapiens were only 150,000 years old. Now we think they are 400,000 years ago. So initially when I was studying genetics, my professor told us that the undertoles and homo sapiens never mixed because they based all of this on mitochondrial DNA. Now we know that they mixed at least four times. We know now there is the Nisovans as well in the East. So and we know that there is a mix between the Nisovans, the undertoles and homo sapiens as well. So what I'm trying to say is we are learning. I don't think anything, you know, we should not simplify the story. I think simplifying the story, you know, yes, we would like to say we came, we descended from ex-population at that particular time. But it's not always as simple. I think the complexity of it makes it more interesting, especially for people like me. As I give examples, there are multiple, multiple populations that are cultures that lived in a very small region, which is, you know, the fertile crescents all the way down to the Levant. But then if we go back 10,000, 12,000 years ago, we know that the source of these populations were only three cultures. So these are fascinating stories. I give you an example. The Levant today was populated. Yes, you have all of these invaders that we talk about, like the Romans of the Persians came and then the Romans. And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then... And then the Persians, of course. So you have all of these mechs that happen in the Levant, okay? And then you would expect to see a lot of these DNA remains of Romans and Persians and the Crusades later. But you don't. You see only very small fraction that actually is actually changing only. Which is fascinating. Which is fascinating. These tell stories that actually make us say, you know, yes, people come, especially in the past, you know, these waves of people moving through wars, you know, Alexander with his army. And they didn't leave any DNA or very, very little DNA to mention. But it's so interesting going back to those three groups that you met, highlights earlier, that they stem from. So I guess that's also in the case with the famous Arabian king, there's like the Nabateans or the Sabaeans. In Yemen, you know, they also have their links to those those. That's right. That's right. That's right. My last question is must also be Semitic languages. Yeah. Can ancient DNA and your studies help us learn about the spread of Semitic languages into the Arabian peninsula? Well, I write about Semitic languages in my book and something that fascinates me. And I learned so much about languages. I'm not the linguist, of course. But languages move very differently than the DNA. The two are not tied together at all. It'll be a mistake to think that we can associate language, language movement with DNA. I'll give you an example. Persia, when Persia dominated the entire region, including the Levant, you know, the lingua Francois? Aramaic. Yes. So it was not Persian at all. But languages move very differently than people. And I think it's a very difficult thing to actually conflate the two together. It's just going to be very difficult. Yeah. This has been such a deep dive into ancient genetics and this links to the Arabian peninsula and the wider Levant, that the fertile crescent taught us a little bit about your new work ancestors. Yes. It's a book about the Levant mostly. And it's a book that tells the story about who the ancestors of the Levant were. And it's not only about ancestry or ancestors of the Levant. It tells the story about cultures, the cultures that lived in the Levant and how these cultures manifested themselves, how we can look at DNA to just understand how these cultures moved. But most importantly, the message in this book is to basically state that DNA is only thread about these cultures. So it tells you how these cultures moved, but it doesn't tell you anything about these cultures. These cultures we talk about languages, we talk about lifestyles, we talk about habits, rituals, and all of this. And I think that's what this book talks about. It talks about that we should not limit a culture to a DNA test, should not limit identities to a DNA test. I always say that roots is not a word to be used for humans, maybe certain plants. But origin is something that you carry with you as a human being. And then your identity is something that you modulate and you evolve. So the DNA does not or should not have the impact that initially we thought it will have on identities and cultures. So that's what I talk about in the book. Yeah, it's a great book as you cover all of that area and the long history and prehistory of those areas. And is it the make up of the populations? It just goes me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today. Thank you. Well, there you go. There was Dr. Pierre Zalua talking all things the first Arabians. I hope you enjoyed the episode. Thank you for listening. Please follow the ancients on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. That really helps us and you'll be doing us a big favor. If you'd also be kind enough to leave us a rating, we'd really appreciate that. Now don't forget, you can also sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries with the new release every week. Sign up at historyhit.com slash subscribe. That's all from me. I'll see you in the next episode. Imagine winning the Euro millions, 14 million pound jackpot on Friday the 13th or even becoming one of our 13 guaranteed UK millionaires. You'd laugh in the face of luck. Friday the 13th will be lucky for some. Yes! Euro millions from the National Lottery Play on it. Estimated jackpot account terms, rules and procedures applied. Players must be 18 or over. You You