Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Perspectives on human migration: introduction
- Section 1 Theory
- Section 2 Geography and migration
- 8 Population structure and migration in Africa: correlations between archaeological, linguistic, and genetic data
- 9 Human migrations in North Africa
- 10 Identity, voice, community: new African immigrants to Kansas
- 11 The African colonial migration into Mexico: history and biological consequences
- 12 Demic expansion or cultural diffusion: migration and Basque origins
- 13 Consequences of migration among the Roma: immunoglobulin markers as a tool in investigating population relationships
- 14 Migration, assimilation, and admixture: genes of a Scot?
- 15 Mennonite migrations: genetic and demographic consequences
- 16 Human migratory history: through the looking-glass of genetic geography of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- 17 Peopling the Tibetan plateau: migrants, genes, and genetic adaptations
- 18 Migration, globalization, instability, and Chinese in Peru
- 19 The great blue highway: human migration in the Pacific
- 20 Migration of pre-Hispanic and contemporary human Mexican populations
- 21 A review of the Tupi expansion in the Amazon
- 22 Molecular consequences of migration and urbanization in Peruvian Amazonia
- 23 Migration in Afro-Brazilian rural communities: crossing historical, demographic, and genetic data
- 24 Indentured migration, gene flow, and the formation of the Indo-Costa Rican population
- 25 Causes and consequences of migration to the Caribbean Islands and Central America: an evolutionary success story
- Section 3 Overview
- Index
- References
11 - The African colonial migration into Mexico: history and biological consequences
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Perspectives on human migration: introduction
- Section 1 Theory
- Section 2 Geography and migration
- 8 Population structure and migration in Africa: correlations between archaeological, linguistic, and genetic data
- 9 Human migrations in North Africa
- 10 Identity, voice, community: new African immigrants to Kansas
- 11 The African colonial migration into Mexico: history and biological consequences
- 12 Demic expansion or cultural diffusion: migration and Basque origins
- 13 Consequences of migration among the Roma: immunoglobulin markers as a tool in investigating population relationships
- 14 Migration, assimilation, and admixture: genes of a Scot?
- 15 Mennonite migrations: genetic and demographic consequences
- 16 Human migratory history: through the looking-glass of genetic geography of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- 17 Peopling the Tibetan plateau: migrants, genes, and genetic adaptations
- 18 Migration, globalization, instability, and Chinese in Peru
- 19 The great blue highway: human migration in the Pacific
- 20 Migration of pre-Hispanic and contemporary human Mexican populations
- 21 A review of the Tupi expansion in the Amazon
- 22 Molecular consequences of migration and urbanization in Peruvian Amazonia
- 23 Migration in Afro-Brazilian rural communities: crossing historical, demographic, and genetic data
- 24 Indentured migration, gene flow, and the formation of the Indo-Costa Rican population
- 25 Causes and consequences of migration to the Caribbean Islands and Central America: an evolutionary success story
- Section 3 Overview
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
This study focuses on the magnitude of the contribution of the African component to the biological diversity of Mexican populations. We analyzed patterns of African migration arising from the slave trade during the colonial expansion, the ethnic composition of colonial populations, and their mating patterns, complemented by bioanthropological evidence of African presence in current Mexican populations (mainly genetic and morphological data).
There are some facts that need to be considered when working on the African contribution to American populations, in general, and those of African-Mexican descent, particularly: (1) African migrations into Mexico, unlike other human group movements, were not voluntary; (2) slave introduction varied across regions and times; (3) neither places of origin nor ethnic affiliations of slaves were a constant during the colonial time; (4) transatlantic shipping of slaves diminished when Mestizo and indigenous populations increased numerically, and it stopped – at least legally – when the British Crown outlawed the slave trade by the mid nineteenth century.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Causes and Consequences of Human MigrationAn Evolutionary Perspective, pp. 201 - 223Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012
References
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