Toda la teoria chola se fue a la mierda jajajaa. Danizito leyo el puro titulo....
Figure 1 | Genetic clues reveal early migration from South America to Polynesia. Ioannidis et al.1 report a DNA analysis of Polynesians and Native American people from South America, focused mainly on modern populations. The authors shed light on the early peopling of Polynesia by uncovering signs of ancient encounters between Polynesians and South Americans (probably those from Colombia), which resulted in a genetic signature called an admixture indicating that children had parents from both populations. The earliest signs of such admixture in Polynesia were estimated to have occurred on the Southern Marquesas islands in AD 1150. Previous studies3,5 indicate that populations moving eastwards from Asia had populated this area by around that time. The authors find evidence for the same type of population admixture being present between AD 1150 and AD 1230 in nearby islands, and then in Rapa Nui (also known as Easter Island) by AD 1380. Some Polynesian islands, including Rapa Nui, have characteristics in common with those of ancient South America, such as elaborate stonework and the sweet-potato plant. But an early role for South Americans in the peopling of the Polynesian islands had not previously been widely accepted.