The Epic of Life

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Chapter 134: The CF Split and the Unsplit C

Aries 22

While D was burying itself under the ash Of Toba, or finding refuge in Japan, The sister clade CF was going through the crash And continuation of its own slow plan. CF had split from DE early in the wandering— Within a few thousand years of the crossing, two Major sub-branches of CT were pondering Separate trajectories, and one was called the CF crew. Then CF itself split. Into C and F. F is the one that stays in the main story. F Would spawn the GHIJK megabranch—the whole of The lineages that would become, in time, every G And H and I and J and K (and L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T) Of the human family tree. F is the generous Trunk from which ninety percent of non-African Men descend. Everything downstream. The ocean and the rain. F will be covered in the coming chapters. The stain And signature of its descendants will take up The better part of the next eight or nine chapters. The cup Of F is deep. But first, C. Haplogroup C. Not the deepest. Not the first to split. Not the widest Of the modern distributions. But perhaps the strangest, The most geographically bewildering, the slightest And most puzzling of the major lineages. The largest Gap in the human migration story belongs to C. Because C is in two places. Two. Not scattered. Two. Not a handful of refugia, as D was battered Into. But two populations, separated by A distance greater than any other haplogroup's fly And range: Indigenous Australia. And the Central Asian steppe. Australia was settled, in the Gaiad's reading, Approximately fifty thousand years ago. The feeding Migration came from Indonesia, across the Wallace Line, which was, at the time, a much narrower palace Of open water than today. Sea levels were lower. The islands Of Sundaland and Sahul formed a near-continuous land Mass across what is now deep ocean. The bands That crossed into Australia were among the earliest Post-CT migrants. They carried C, and C was the curliest And tangled-most of the haplogroups they carried. They arrived. They settled. They spread across the entire continent, and they thrived There for the next fifty thousand years. Fifty. Thousand. Years. The longest continuous human occupation Of any single continent on earth. The Aboriginal Peoples of Australia are, by the measure of the operation Of their unbroken presence on the land, the oldest Culture on earth. Fifty thousand years of the boldest And most patient continuous adaptation to a single Continent. Fifty thousand years of songlines and the single- Minded knowledge of the water-holes, the migrations Of the kangaroo, the flowering of the banksia, the stations Of the fire-stick farming, the languages, the laws, The dreamings—fifty thousand years of patient causes And effects on the land and on the body and on the mind. And approximately sixty percent of Aboriginal Australian Men carry C. C is the dominant patrilineal sign Of the continent's indigenous population. The alien And later European arrivals brought their own haplogroups. But the C of Australia—the old C, the one that scoops And gathers up the oldest story on earth—is the marker Of an unbroken fifty-thousand-year continuity. The starker Fact is that this same lineage—the same C, not a closely- Related cousin, but the same haplogroup, precisely— Is also the dominant lineage of the Central Asian steppe. The Mongols. The Kazakhs. The Tuvans. The Buryats. The swept And windy grasslands of the heartland of Eurasia, Where the mounted nomads would build, in much later ages, the empires That would change the course of history—from the Xiongnu to Genghis Khan's pyres And conquests and the successor Golden Hordes—carry, at High frequencies, C. The same haplogroup that sat On the Australian continent for fifty thousand years Is the one whose later descendants raise the spears Of the Mongol cavalry over the high grasses of the steppe. One lineage. Two places. Two completely distinct epic And separate cultural trajectories. The oldest continuous Culture on earth. And the greatest land-empire builders. The sinuous And strange fact of a single patrilineal marker That spans the two. How did this happen? What is the starker Mechanism behind the non-divergence? Why has C Not split, in the way that every other major haplogroup freely And genetically has, into distinct regional sub-clades That we name and number and treat as separate cascades? The scientific answer is that C does have internal sub-clades— C1, C2, and so on—and that the Australian C Is largely C1, while the steppe C is largely C2. There are reads Of the data that distinguish them. But at the level Of the haplogroup name, at the level where the gavel Of nomenclature comes down, they are still C. They have Not been split into two separate haplogroups. The salve Of the distinct sub-clade designation does not quite close The puzzle of how closely related they are. The knows And does-not-knows of the deep genetic record here Produces something strange: a single name for two careers That are as divergent as any two can be. The Gaiad does not resolve the puzzle. The Gaiad lets the mystery Of C stand. The chapter is not about a causal explanation— Not a catastrophe, as in D. Not a refugium-driven preservation. C has a different story, and the story is: we do not know. What we know is that two peoples, fifty thousand years apart in the flow Of their development on their respective continents, still carry The same mark in their Y. The oldest Aborigines, whose tarry And unbroken knowledge of their country goes back further Than any other human group's unbroken relationship to a further Place, and the Mongol horsemen of the grasslands, whose empire Once stretched from the Sea of Japan to the Black Sea's fire And cold waters. Both C. Both carrying some ancient Signature of a common patrilineal ancestor, whose patient Descendants went, some of them, south, and others, north, and kept The marker intact across fifty thousand years, and have crept Into the chromosomes of two of the most distinctive Cultures on earth without either culture being distinctive Of the other, or remembering the other, or having any Awareness at all that the other exists. The many And disconnected branches of humanity share things That no living member of any culture remembers. The strings Of deep ancestry are quieter than any language. The Arnhem Land man, singing the songline of his range, Does not know about Mongolia. The Mongolian shepherd Does not know about the Dreaming. But the shepherd And the singer share an ancestor. Somewhere, deep in the past, A common father, whose children walked in opposite directions, the cast And shadow of whose Y is now held by the continent of Australia And the grasslands of central Asia. One man. Two continents. The failure Of the usual divergence to produce two separate names. C is the unsplit. C is the haplogroup that claims Two of the most distinctive human trajectories without being split Into two names. C is the exception to the splitting rules. The fit And fitness of its lineage, its insistence on staying C across the millennia of its carriers' laying Of tracks across two continents, is the strangeness of this chapter. There is no catastrophe here. No Toba. No fracture And refugium. Just a migration that went two ways, and a marker That didn't speciate, or didn't speciate as much as the starker And more divergent other haplogroups did. The steppe and the desert Continent are held together by the invisible insert Of a shared patrilineal signature. And then the steppe Story goes its own way. The horses are domesticated. The step And gait of the mounted nomad emerges. The empires Of the steppe rise and fall and rise again, and the wires And tensions of the grassland-versus-settled-civilization Conflict that will define so much of Eurasian history's station Come into being. The Mongol horseman of the Genghis Khan era Is still carrying, in most cases, haplogroup C. The aura Of the patrilineal continuity stretches from the earliest Migrants into central Asia to the successor hordes of the nearest Modern descendants in Mongolia and Kazakhstan today. And the Australian story, meanwhile, goes its own way. The Aboriginal peoples develop the most complex and sophisticated Non-agricultural society on earth. They become the dedicated Stewards of a continent. They never develop writing. They never Build cities. They never, in the sense of the builders of the clever And fortified civilizations of Mesopotamia or China or Mesoamerica, "Civilize." But they produce something else, something the hysteric And superficial European colonizers of the eighteenth and nineteenth Centuries could not see: a way of being human that had deep, profound Achievement in its own register. Fifty thousand years of song. Fifty thousand years of painting. Fifty thousand years of the long And patient reading of the land. The Gaiad will not rank them Below the city-builders. The Gaiad honors them as them. And the same Y signature, meanwhile, is being carried By the Mongol horseman whose empire will be vast and varied And who will not know that a cousin, deep in the south, Is holding the same mark in his body, the same mouth Of the same chromosomal inheritance. The two peoples Will never meet. Will never know of each other. The steeples And songs of each will be entirely its own. But in their blood, they are kin. And the chapter ends there. With the strange and unresolved fact of the shared bone Of inheritance, the unsplit C, and the fare And content of two completely different cultural legacies, Bound in silence, through the body, to each other. The haplogroup refuses to speciate. It insists on unity Where culture has produced total divergence. It is the mother Of two very different children, who never meet, and who Would not recognize each other if they did. And the clue That they are related is carried only in the chromosomal Ink of their bodies, unread and unreadable by the total Of their own languages and mythologies. C is the unsplit haplogroup. C is the long And patient one, the mother of the apologies That evolution never offered for failing to split The lineage when the distance demanded it. It Is what it is. And the Australian and the Mongol Are, against all reasonable expectation, still one gongoll And chime of the same ancestral sound. Their common Father watches them through the silence of the chromosome. And F, meanwhile, in the next chapter, begins The proliferation of every other haplogroup's twins.