'Jin Li' (
Chinese:金力, ''Jin Li'') is a
Chinese geneticist who led
[Van Arsdel, K., Garvin, L. Genetic Findings Support 'Out of Africa' Theory. Texas Medical Center News. October 15, 1998.] the research that concluded that all
East Asians, including the Chinese, originated from
Africa, adding support to the
recent single-origin hypothesis of which he is considered
[China News. Genetic research shows that the Peking Man is not Chinese people's ancestor. Sina.com. January 14, 2005. ] a leading proponent. His team analyzed the
Y chromosomes of males around China and compared this group with those of
Southeast Asians and
Africans.
[Chen Ching-chih. Dumping the Yellow Emperor myth. May 4, 2006.] Results of the analysis suggested that Southeast Asia was the first destination of the migration from Africa to Asia which began approximately 60,000 years ago; from there, migrants moved into
Southern China, then crossing the
Yangtze River to
Northern China.
[Jin, et al. Hypothetical ancestral migration routes to the Far East. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. September 29, 1998.][Jin, et al. Y染色体å•å€åž‹åœ¨ä¸å›½æ±‰æ—人群ä¸çš„å¤šæ€æ€§. Science in China. 2000 Vol.30 No.6 p.614-620. ] The 1998 study, which used genetic markers called
microsatellites to compare Chinese populations,
[ did not support an independent origin of Homo sapiens in China.][Jin, et al. Genetic relationship of populations in China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. September 29, 1998.] The findings contradict the hypothesis that Peking Man (Homo erectus) was the ancestor of the Chinese people[ and dispel the myth that the Chinese descended from the Yellow Emperor independently from other ethnic groups.][.]
Jin is a professor at the National Human Genome Center in Shanghai as well as at the Institute of Genetics of Fudan University.[1] Jin is the principal investigator of Asian populations for the Genographic Project which seeks DNA samples from the public to map historical human migration patterns around the world.[2]
References
1. People's Daily. New Genetics Evidence Proves African Origin of Modern Chinese. July 15, 2000.
2. National Geogrpahic. Profile: Li Jin. Accessed 2007-07-05.