The tools found in Armenia, Malaysia and Britain could not have originated in Africa due to their age, so people in various regions had the knowledge and intelligence to make modern technology prior to the African migration. Furthermore, fossil evidence in Europe and Asia seem to show a combination of Homo erectus and Homo sapiens features, suggesting that Neanderthals were not totally replaced and that interbreeding did occur. DNA studies also support the genetic continuity of Neanderthal genetic makeup in addition to the independent emergence of individuals having no connection to Africa. In brief, although the Out of Africa theory is well accepted there is plenty of evidence deploring this idea and rather supporting the multiregional hypothesis to explain the evolution of
The tools found in Armenia, Malaysia and Britain could not have originated in Africa due to their age, so people in various regions had the knowledge and intelligence to make modern technology prior to the African migration. Furthermore, fossil evidence in Europe and Asia seem to show a combination of Homo erectus and Homo sapiens features, suggesting that Neanderthals were not totally replaced and that interbreeding did occur. DNA studies also support the genetic continuity of Neanderthal genetic makeup in addition to the independent emergence of individuals having no connection to Africa. In brief, although the Out of Africa theory is well accepted there is plenty of evidence deploring this idea and rather supporting the multiregional hypothesis to explain the evolution of