This paper presents a multi-disciplinary synthesis of the evidence bearing on four interconnected questions: (1) What were the biological characteristics, specifically the skin pigmentation, of the earliest anatomically modern humans? (2) What was the character and scope of African civilizational achievement prior to European colonial contact? (3) What was the ancestral identity, including the physical characteristics, of the ancient populations of the Near East, specifically the ancient Israelites, and how do those characteristics relate to the broader African origin of the species? (4) What is the relationship between the ancient populations of sub-Saharan West Africa, including the Akan, Ga, and related peoples of the Gold Coast region, and the ancient Israelite covenant community? The paper draws on convergent evidence from paleoanthropology, population genetics, ancient DNA analysis, pigmentation biology, Egyptology, the history of mathematics and medicine, classical philology, biblical archaeology, Afro-Asiatic linguistics, and comparative cultural anthropology. It concludes that the original human condition was dark-skinned; that Africa produced civilizational achievements of the first order that preceded comparable achievements elsewhere by centuries to millennia; that the ancient populations of the Near East were dark-skinned non-European people whose physical characteristics connected them to the broader African origin of the species; that the transmission of African intellectual achievement to the Greek tradition is documented in the ancient sources themselves; that the San people of southern Africa carry the oldest living human lineage currently held by any population, and that an ancient dispersal from Africa placed dark-skinned populations across a southern arc from the Indian Ocean to Japan to the Americas before the later Eurasian diversification; and that the cultural, linguistic, genetic, and oral historical evidence connecting West African populations, particularly those of the Gold Coast region, to the ancient Israelite covenant world is sufficiently specific and convergent to warrant serious scholarly investigation. The paper engages the ten principal counter-arguments to its conclusions and provides structured rebuttals grounded in the peer-reviewed literature. Keywords: human origins, skin pigmentation, African civilizations, ancient Egypt, ancient Israelites, San people, Southern Dispersal, Andamanese, Aboriginal Australians, Ainu, Gold Coast, Akan, transatlantic slave trade, population genetics, paleoanthropology
Joseph Tekper Dugbatey Narnor (Tue,) studied this question.