A 2019 genetic study by Fudan University in Shanghai analyzed DNA from 11,670 people across all Chinese provinces and compared it against major ancient civilizations worldwide, including Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Indus Valley, Mesoamerican, and European populations. The study found no genetic continuity with any of these civilizations, but discovered a direct genetic match with the Yellow River civilization that emerged approximately 7,000 years ago. This genetic evidence demonstrates that Chinese civilization developed independently along the Yellow River, with modern Chinese populations showing remarkable genetic stability across dynasties, challenging the diffusionist model that had dominated Western academic thought for over a century.
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Scientists Compared Chinese DNA to Every Ancient Civilization — Only One MatchedAjouté :
A Chinese scientists have managed to fuse nearly all 16 chromosomes of brewer's yeast to just one super chromosome.
>> In 2019, a team of geneticists [music] at Fudan University in Shanghai made a decision that would quietly shake the foundations of everything we thought we knew about human civilization. They collected DNA samples from 11,670 people spread across every single province in China.
>> I am adopted from China. [music] So I know very little about my origins or my family history.
>> Then they did something no research team had ever attempted at this scale. They lined that genetic data up against every major ancient civilization on record.
Egyptian mummies, Mesopotamian burial sites, Indis Valley remains, Mesoamerican populations, ancient Anatolians, [music] Paleolithic Europeans, every single one >> around the world have much in common, but also enormous diversity. Some of the differences between each of us come from our environments and life experiences.
>> One by one, the comparisons came back, and one by one, they failed to match.
until they reached one civilization most of you have probably never studied in school. And when that match came back, it did not just identify an ancestor. It rewrote the entire story of how 1.4 billion people came to exist on [music] this planet. Stay with me because by the time we get to the end of this, you are going to look at Chinese civilization completely differently and you are going to understand why Western academia [music] spent decades asking the wrong questions entirely. The science behind the search.
Before we get into the results, you need to understand what scientists were actually looking for. Because this is not ancestry.com.
This is something far more precise and far more revealing.
DNA carries what geneticists call mutation patterns. Think of them as biological timestamps. When two populations split apart and stop [music] interbreeding, their DNA starts to diverge.
>> We're trying to understand [music] what accounts for the variability in mutation rates and how that changes longitudinally [music] in in people with age.
>> Mutations accumulate at measurable rates. The longer the separation, the greater the divergence.
This means that by analyzing those patterns today, [music] scientists can calculate not just whether two populations are related, but approximately when they separated and how closely they were ever connected.
The tool they relied on most heavily was haplo group analysis. Haplo groups are clusters of genetic markers passed down through specific lines. Y chromosomes from fathers to sons, mitochondrial DNA from mothers to children. They are essentially genetic clan markers that survive for thousands of years largely intact.
When you find the same Hapla group in two different populations, you have found a genetic relationship. When you do not, you have found separation. They also analyzed something called single nucleotide polymorphisms, SNPs. [music] These are individual positions in the DNA sequence where tiny variations occur between people. By tracking which [music] SNPs appeared in ancient remains versus modern populations, researchers could calculate the exact degree of genetic drift over thousands of years.
Now, here is what made the Fudon [music] study significant before it even published a single result.
Modern Chinese populations, [music] despite being spread across a land mass roughly the size of the United States, show surprisingly low genetic diversity compared to other large global populations.
That tells scientists something immediately. It suggests a common origin point, a single ancestral group that expanded [music] rapidly in evolutionary terms. The question was, where did that ancestral group [music] come from? To answer that, they needed to test every possibility, and they did. The eliminations begin.
Let's start with the civilization most people point to when they think about ancient history, Egypt. 3,000 years of recorded history. Pharaohs, pyramids, one of the most documented civilizations in human history. DNA extracted from mummified remains revealed specific Hapla group patterns. But in father-son rivalry, [music] there's one category where he wins hands down, his mummy.
Because Zeti the first boasts some of the finest mummification [music] work in all of ancient Egyptian history.
genetic markers passed down through thousands of years of Egyptian ancestry.
The research team ran the comparison against modern Chinese populations.
The result, minimal overlap. The Haplo groups did not align. The genetic distance between ancient Egyptians and modern Chinese populations was too large, too clear, too definitive.
Whatever thread connected ancient Egypt to the broader human family tree did not run through the yellow river. Next, Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the civilization credited with inventing writing, codified law and urban society, Sumerian remains, Aadian burial sites, Babylonian genetic profiles. All of it was compared against modern Chinese DNA. Again, minimal overlap. The Hapla groups did not match. The mutation patterns showed clear separation, not connection. Now, pause here for a second because at this point in the study, you might be thinking what the researchers were thinking. Fine, Egypt and Mesopotamia are geographically distant. Maybe the connection comes [music] from somewhere closer. That is exactly what they thought too. The closest miss. The Indis Valley civilization sits geographically closer to China than any other major ancient civilization outside East Asia.
The cities of Harapa and Mohenjodaro flourished in what is now Pakistan and northwest India from roughly 3,300 to 1,300 B.CE.
>> The first example of rock architecture rock architecture by the Arabs.
It is continuing for the east east on [music] that side for the west on that side.
>> Sophisticated urban planning, standardized weights and [music] measures, a still undeciphered writing system. If there was going to be a genetic connection anywhere, this was the most likely candidate. The comparison revealed some overlap. And for a moment, that must have been interesting to see. But when the researchers looked closer, the numbers told a sobering [music] story. Hapla group R1A common in Indis Valley populations appeared in less than 2% of modern Chinese samples. 2% that is not a shared origin. That is occasional contact. The genetic equivalent of two neighbors who wave at each other across the fence but never share a meal. They moved to the [music] Americas. Mesoamerican civilizations, the Maya, the Aztec, the Olme descended from groups that crossed the Bearing Land Bridge [music] roughly 15,000 to 20,000 years ago. Those groups originally came from Siberian populations in Northeast Asia. So theoretically, [music] there should be some shared genetic material and there was. But the divergence was enormous.
Hapla group Q dominant in Native American populations appeared in modern Chinese DNA at rates below 1%.
The separation was ancient complete.
These were populations that had not shared a common ancestor for at least 15,000 years. Ancient Anatolia, the people who built Gobeci, Haplo group J, common in Anatolian remains barely registered in Chinese samples. European Paleolithic hunter gatherers. Hapla group one prevalent in early European populations was virtually absent [music] in modern Chinese DNA.
One by one, every ancient civilization outside East Asia, the same [music] result, no genetic continuity, no ancestral link, no shared origin. And then the research [music] team turned their attention to a civilization most of you have probably never heard of.
Archaeologists have discovered a huge [music] ancient city.
>> The match, the Yellow River civilization.
Say that name out loud for a second.
Does it ring a bell from your history classes? Probably not. And that is itself [music] a telling fact, one we are going to come back to. The Yellow River civilization emerged approximately 7,000 years ago in the northern plains of what is now China. No pyramids, no ziggurats, no massive stone monuments built [music] to outlast eternity. These people built with wood and earth, and most of what they constructed decayed into the soil thousands of years ago.
But their DNA did not decay. When the Fudon team compared genetic markers from Yellow River archaeological sites to modern Chinese populations, the results were unlike anything they had seen in any other comparison. Hla group 03 the most common Y chromosome HLA [music] group in modern Chinese populations showed up in over 60% of yellow river remains mitochondrial DNA HLA groups M and D passed down through maternal lines matched at similar [music] rates this was not a partial match this was not a trace this was a direct unmistakable genetic through line connecting living people today to a civilization that was farming millet along a Chinese river 7,000 years ago. But the team went further. They analyzed specific SNPs, those single nucleotide polymorphisms we talked about earlier. They tracked SNPs associated with lactose intolerance, which was common in Yellow River populations.
Those same SNPS showed up at nearly identical rates in modern northern Chinese populations.
SNPS related to hair texture, eye shape, skin pigmentation all matched. This was not [music] just Hapla group similarity.
This was fine grained, precise, undeniable genetic continuity. Let that settle for a moment. The ancestors of 1.4 billion people alive today were not in Egypt. They were not in Mesopotamia.
They were not in the Indis Valley. They were farming millet along the Yellow River. and they stayed there. Who were these people really? Here is where the story becomes something more than a genetics paper. [music] The Yellow River civilization was not a primitive backwater waiting for Western ideas to arrive. Archaeological sites like Bano and Gangjai reveal something that should genuinely surprise you.
These were not scattered tribal camps.
These were planned villages, circular houses arranged with clear social organization, pottery decorated with sophisticated painted designs, oracle bones, and turtle shells etched with the earliest known precursors to Chinese [music] writing. Their agriculture was built around foxtail millet and broomcorn [music] millet, crops they domesticated entirely independently. not wheat, not barley, not any of the staple crops [music] being developed in the fertile crescent at the same time. This civilization looked at the same agricultural problem every ancient [music] society faced. How to feed a growing population and came up with its own answer, a completely original answer. This is critical because there was a school of thought in Western academia for over a century called the diffusionist model that essentially argued all complex [music] civilization radiated outward from a few key source points, usually Mesopotamia, sometimes Egypt. The idea was that if you found a civilization with writing, [music] agriculture and organized government, it must have borrowed those [music] developments from someone more advanced.
China never fit that model. Chinese writing bears zero resemblance to Kune form or hieroglyphics.
Chinese bronzework developed independently.
Chinese philosophy, Chinese statecraft, Chinese agricultural systems. None of it looks like something borrowed and adapted. It looks like something invented from scratch.
Western academics spent decades trying to explain that. Some attributed it to parallel development. Some quietly ignored it. Some [music] kept reaching for connections that the evidence never actually supported. The Fudan study ended that conversation [music] not with a theory, with data. Chinese civilization was not a branch of some greater civilizational tree. It was its own tree rooted in the Yellow River basin growing independently for 7,000 [music] years.
>> Now, this is quite a discovery.
Fragments of a biblical scroll.
>> The expansion. But here is where the story gets even more interesting. The Yellow River people did not just stay put. Around 5,000 years ago, they began moving south. And the genetic [music] data tracks exactly what happened. When they reached the Yangze River Basin, they encountered a different population entirely. Rice farmers who had been cultivating wet rice agriculture for at least 8,000 years.
>> [music] >> These southern populations carried different mitochondrial haplo groups, particularly variants of haplo group B and F that were rare among yellow river populations. Their Y chromosome haplo groups showed different patterns too.
Haplo group 01 common in southern populations appeared at much lower rates in the north. The Yangy River civilization was not primitive.
Archaeological sites like Hemodu show sophisticated pile dwelling houses built over water, jade carving traditions of remarkable refinement, and an agricultural [music] system entirely distinct from the north. These were not people waiting to be absorbed. They had their own path of development, their own genetic story, their own 8,000 years of history. What happened next was not conquest in the way we usually imagine it. It was integration.
The Yellow River Hapla group spread south, but they did not erase what was already there. Instead, modern southern Chinese populations carry a blended genetic profile, predominantly yellow river ancestry, with meaningful ad mixture from the original Yangy rice farmers. The percentages vary by region in ways that tell the story of exactly how that expansion moved across the landscape.
Populations in Jang and Fujian, right in the heart of the ancient Yangze rice farming zone, show 25 to 30% ancestry [music] from those original southern populations.
Further north in Djang Su [music] and Ane, the ad mixture drops to 15 to 20%.
Even in the far south [music] in Guangdong and Guangshi, Yellow River ancestry still dominates at 70 to 75%.
Despite those regions being [music] over 1,000 km from the original Yellow River sites, the expansion was thorough, persistent, and it was not a blitzkrieg.
[music] It was a slowmoving demographic tide that absorbed rather than eliminated.
The same pattern played out when Yellow River populations expanded west towards Sichuan and Tibet. Tibetan populations today carry the Yellow River haplo groups, but they also carry genetic variants related to high altitude adaptation that simply do not appear in [music] lowland Chinese populations.
Variants in the EPA1 [music] gene, which assists with oxygen processing above 4,000 m, appear at 80% frequency in Tibetans, but are virtually [music] absent in Hanchinese populations.
When Yellow River people moved onto the Tibetan plateau, they mixed with groups who had spent thousands of years adapting to extreme altitude, and that ad mixture gave them the genetic tools to survive there. By 3,000 years ago, the genetic profile of what would become the Han Chinese was essentially [music] established. Yellow River ancestry as the foundation. Southern and western ad mixture layered in at varying degrees depending on geography. And from [music] that point forward, something remarkable happened. It stayed that way. When such fragments are found in an excavation and brought straight here, >> the stability that defies history. This is the part of the story that should genuinely astonish you. When researchers compared modern Chinese DNA to ancient DNA from Han Dynasty tombs 2,000 years old, the genetic profiles matched almost exactly. When they looked at Shang dynasty remains from 3,200 years ago, the same result. The genetic signature was stable across dynasties, [music] across wars, across political upheavalss that shook the entire civilization to its foundations. Now, compare that to Europe.
Around 5,000 years ago, step pastoralists from Central Asia [music] swept westward and replaced up to 90% of the existing male population in some regions.
Bronze Age Britain experienced similar dramatic replacement when the bell beaker culture arrived. The modern European is a genetic mosaic. Layer upon layer of ancestry [music] from populations that arrived, conquered, mixed, and moved on. China experienced [music] invasion too. The Mongols, the Manchu, waves of nomadic incursion from the north. And yet, the genetics barely moved.
Geneticists can [music] detect Mongol ancestry in northern Chinese populations, but it typically registers at [music] less than 2%. The Mongols ruled China for nearly a century, a century of political control, and they left a genetic footprint of less than 2%. [music] How is that possible? Three factors, and all three are [music] worth understanding. The first is geography.
The Yellow River basin is ringed by some of the most formidable natural barriers on Earth. The Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau to the southwest, the Taklamakan and Gobi deserts to the northwest, rugged mountain systems to the south, the Pacific Ocean to the east. These barriers did not make China unconquerable. History proved that wrong repeatedly. But they ensured that when invasions came, they came from neighboring regions that had already experienced some degree of genetic mixing with Chinese populations.
There were no fresh genetic intrusions from truly [music] distant populations.
The second factor is agriculture. The Yellow River Basin during the Bronze Age [music] could support roughly 100 people per square kilometer. The step regions to the north, the home of the nomadic peoples who periodically [music] threaten China, could support perhaps one to two people per square kilometer.
When an invading force is outnumbered by that kind of ratio, military victory does not translate into genetic replacement. The conquered population is simply too large to displace. The third factor is cultural continuity, and this one is arguably the most powerful of all.
Chinese civilization developed [music] a writing system, a bureaucratic state and a shared cultural identity that absorbed its conquerors [music] rather than being absorbed by them. When the Mongols took control in the 13th century, they did not replace [music] Chinese administrative systems. They adopted them. Their elites learned Chinese, mastered Confucian texts, intermarried with Han families. Within a few generations, their distinct genetic identity dissolved into the existing population. The civil service examination system created a powerful incentive for cultural assimilation.
If you wanted to participate in governance if you wanted power, status, wealth, you had to master the Chinese [music] classical tradition. It did not matter where your grandfather came from.
If your grandson wanted [music] to rise, he had to become culturally Chinese. And once he became culturally [music] Chinese, his children followed and their children after that. The writing system was a binding agent unlike anything in the western world. Spoken dialects across China diverged dramatically over thousands of years. A person from the north and a person from the south might be completely unintelligible to each other in conversation, but they could communicate perfectly in writing because the characters remained consistent across all dialects.
That shared written language created a civilizational glue, a common identity that transcended regional difference and made the idea of being Chinese mean something durable and real across millennia. what this means for all of us.
The Fudon study documented something that has no real parallel in human history. 7,000 years of genetic continuity. [music] A single ancestral population that expanded, integrated neighboring groups, absorbed invaders, survived famines, outlasted empires, and remained at its genetic core what it had always been.
This is why Chinese civilization never experienced [music] a true dark age.
Egypt collapsed. Mesopotamia fragmented.
The Indis Valley civilization disappeared so completely that we still cannot read its writing. Rome fell.
Medieval Europe plunged [music] into centuries of instability. But China, dynastic cycles, yes, periods of fragmentation and reunification, absolutely. But the civilization itself never collapsed. The writing never disappeared. The agricultural base never failed. The institutional memory held.
Now we know why. [music] Because the population was stable. The same people farming the Yellow River Basin 5,000 years ago are the genetic ancestors of the people living there today.
That kind of continuity creates resilience at a civilizational level that is almost impossible to fully comprehend [music] if you grew up in a part of the world where populations have been reshuffled repeatedly over the centuries. And it also demolishes finally and completely the diffusionist model that western anthropology spent more than a century promoting.
You cannot argue that Chinese civilization borrowed its foundations from Mesopotamia or Egypt when the genetic data shows zero ancestral connection between those populations.
The people who built Chinese civilization were not in the Middle East. They were never in the Middle East. They were here along the Yellow River developing their own agriculture, their own writing, their own systems [music] of government entirely on their own terms. This also reshapes how we think [music] about Chinese identity today. The common perception of a monolithic Honchinese ethnicity is a political and cultural construct as all national identities are. But genetically, what the data actually shows is something more [music] nuanced and more interesting. It is a spectrum, a core yellow river ancestry [music] with varying degrees of regional ad mixture depending on geography and history. [music] Northern populations sitting closest to the original yellow river heartland show 85 to 90% yellow river ancestry.
Southern populations show more blending from the ancient Yangy rice farmers. But across all of that regional variation, the genetic similarity between a person from northern China and a person [music] from southern China is greater than the genetic similarity between a person from northern Europe and a person from southern Europe. That is what 7,000 years of relative genetic stability actually looks like in the data. And it does not stop at China's borders.
Chinese diaspora populations in Southeast Asia, Taiwan, and communities worldwide carry the same genetic markers. The Yellow [music] River signature travels with them. It is a biological thread connecting 1.4 billion people, wherever [music] they live today, back to a single group of millet farmers standing on the northern plains of China 7 millennia ago. Every now and then, science does not [music] just add to what we know. It fundamentally changes the frame through which we understand human history. The food and study is one of those moments. And what makes it remarkable is [music] not just what it found. It is what it disproved.
Decades of assumptions. A century of diffusionist thinking. The quiet persistent western habit of placing itself at the center of every civilization's origin story. The DNA does not support that story. It never did. The ancestors of 1.4 billion people were not wanderers who borrowed ideas from more advanced cultures. They were innovators who built something original, something enduring, [music] something so genetically and culturally stable that it is still recognizable in the people, in the language, in the written characters 7,000 years later. That is not just history. That is a civilizational achievement unlike anything else on the human record. If you made it to the end of this video, do me a favor, drop a comment below and tell me, does this change how you think about Chinese history? Because I genuinely want to know. And if this kind of deep dive into DNA and ancient civilization is what you come here for, subscribe right now. Next week, we are going into the Tarim Basin mummies, bodies with European features found deep inside western China, and the genetic evidence that is forcing [music] scientists to completely rethink the ancient Silk Road migration routes. That one is already uploaded. Click it now.
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