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Malaria shaped early humans where they could live and migrate across Africa

Science
Published on 1 May 2026
Malaria shaped early humans where they could live and migrate across Africa

High malaria zones drove ancient populations apart

A new study suggests malaria was more than a health threat for early Africans—it helped determine where people settled. Using advanced models, researchers found ancient communities tended to avoid areas with higher disease risk, which fragmented populations over time. That separation may explain part of the genetic diversity seen today, showing disease as a key driver alongside geography and environment.

  • Models link malaria risk to ancient settlement choices across Africa
  • Higher malaria areas were avoided, causing population fragmentation
  • Fragmentation may have boosted today’s genetic diversity
  • The study frames disease as an evolutionary force, not background noise
Read the full story at The Economic Times

This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on The Economic TimesThe Economic Times

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