The fascinating history of Melanesians, the world’s only black blondes

Source: https://face2faceafrica.com/

Photo: Wiki CC

They are found in the Solomon Islands northeast of Australia with an unusual trait – beautiful dark skin with naturally blond hair.

It is believed that blondes could only be found among Caucasians; so, how do the Melanesians, mostly located east of Papua New Guinea in Oceania, have the striking contrast of the darkest skin in the world outside of Africa and blonde hair? This question has baffled many scientists for years.

Until now, genetic experts and scientists have attributed the odd trait of the over half a million Melanesian people to inheritance – from the Europeans, particularly, the British, German and Australians, who have been associated with the island for several years.

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In the 19th century, many of the islands were under German jurisdiction and in 1893, the UK took the southern Solomon Islands and declared the region a protectorate.

The rest of the islands were subsequently added to the protectorate, with Australian and British companies later setting up coconut plantations.

The Melanesians are the world’s only black blondes — Blonde Hair

Thus, it was not unwise to think that the dark-skinned Melanesians had their blonde hair after mixing with “foreigners,” though the local people insisted that their blonde hair was due to their diet rich in fish and their constant exposure to the sun.

In 2012, it turned out that all these theories were false, as investigations revealed that the weird colour combination of the Melanesians was due to a random mutation.

A single mutation was found to be responsible for almost half of the variation in Solomon Islanders’ hair colour and the striking aspect was that this gene mutation appeared to have arisen in the Pacific and not introduced into the island by fair-haired Europeans intermarrying with islanders.

“[T]he human characteristic of blond hair arose independently in equatorial Oceania,” study researcher Eimear Kenny, a postdoctoral scholar at the Stanford University School of Medicine, said.

“That’s quite unexpected and fascinating.”

The researchers gathered saliva from 43 blonds and 42 dark-haired Solomon Islanders to analyze for clues to the genes behind their hair colour.

According to livescience.com:

A genome-wide analysis turned up a shockingly clear result, rare in the world of genetics where a single trait can be influenced by dozens or more genes. A gene called TYRP1, which resides on the ninth chromosome of human’s 23 pairs of chromosomes, explained 46.4 per cent of the variation in the islanders’ hair colour. (Chromosomes are coiled packets of DNA.)

A mutation in this gene affects an enzyme known to be involved in human pigmentation, the researchers found. This mutation doesn’t appear in European genomes, an analysis of genomes from 52 human populations around the world revealed. Rather, it seems to have arisen independently and persisted in the Melanesian population.”

The Melanesians are the world’s only black blondes

For Jonathan Friedlaender, an anthropologist emeritus at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the mutation may have arisen by chance in one individual and drifted to a high frequency in the Solomon Islands because the original population was small.

“This whole area seems to have been populated by very small groups of people making it across these stepping-stone islands, so you do have very dramatic effects in fluctuations of gene frequency.”

Out of the research, it was also discovered that while all humans outside of Africa have genes passed down from the Neanderthals, Melanesians are the only known humans with a different prehistoric ancestry.

They are believed to have evolved from an interbreeding of the Denisova hominin, Neanderthal man’s distant cousin, hence the people have to some extent different genes, which gives them their unique blond hair.

A child from the tropical region of Melanesia

The tropical region of Melanesia is part of a larger culture area called Oceania that includes Melanesia, Polynesia, Micronesia, and Australia.

With its native people otherwise called Papuans, Melanesia includes the islands of New Guinea, Vanuatu (the former New Hebrides), New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands, and some smaller neighbouring islands.

Accounts state that they emigrated from Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago and dispersed along the southern edge of Asia.

Melanesia currently has over 1,000 languages, with pidgins and creole languages developing from trade and cultural interaction centuries before European encounter.

The Melanesia people have still kept some of their traditional beliefs and customs — trip down memory lane

The area had no written language before the arrival of the Europeans and hence they used words of mouth from generation to generation to educate and share stories.

Till date, there are still communities that have little interaction with the rest of the world.

Christianity is the main religion, with many missionaries across the area though some people still practice their native religions such as the belief in a variety of spirits that inhabit the forests, mountains, and swamps.


A family from Melanesia — Flickr

Households vary in size and in some small societies, everyone in the group lives in a house. Apart from playing ceremonial and political roles in the region, women are often the primary caregivers to children and the primary producers of food.

Now with wage labour, work among the Melanesians was often cooperative. One distinguishing feature of the people is their art which is designed for their usefulness rather than for beauty.


Solomon Islands Melanesian dancers — trip down memory lane

Sculpture and painting have attracted thousands of tourists to the area, particularly, the Sepik River region, though this has yet to provide wealth for the majority of the people.

Just like the rest of the world, the tropical region of Melanesia has had to grapple with some social problems such as alcoholism, crime, and other serious health conditions like malaria, as well as AIDS, particularly in Papua New Guinea.

In spite of these challenges, the region, with its beautiful islands, is to many people a paradise with an exotic history and culture and the happiest and friendliest people in the world.

Melanesian people: The world’s only natural black blondes

For several years, blond hair was attributed to Caucasians but the Melanesians of Solomon Islands are one of the few groups with blonde hair outside Europe.

Source: https://www.pulse.ng/lifestyle/

Melanesians are black island people in the south pacific that migrated over thousands of years ago, long before the blacks that came to the Americas as slaves.

Melanesia is a sub-region of Oceania extending from the western end of the Pacific Ocean to the Arafura Sea, and eastward to Fiji. The region comprises most of the islands immediately north and northeast of Australia, including the countries of Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Vanuatu, Solomon Island, and New Caledonia. The name Melanesia was first used by Jules Dumont d’Urville in 1832 to denote an ethnic and geographical grouping of islands distinct from Polynesia and Micronesia.

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Until recently, the indigenous melanesian people practised cannibalism, head-hunting, kidnapping and slavery, just like the Asmat tribe, but with contact with Europeans, the population is now predominantly Christian. However, more than 90% lead rural lives.

Melanesian Blonde hair

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

The Melanesian people of the Solomon Islands are the point of interest when it comes to dark skin and blond hair. The Solomon Islands are located in the South Pacific, the very heart of Melanesia, just Northeast of Australia, between Papua and Vanuatu and is an independent state within the British Commonwealth.

Although the indigenous Melanesian population of the islands possess the darkest skin outside of Africa, between 5 and 10% have bright blond hair.

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

There have been several theories on how they got their blond hair — from sun and salt whitening, high fish intake, or genetic heritage from mixed-breeding with Americans/Europeans who founded the islands.

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A geneticist from Nova Scotia agricultural college in Canada, Sean Myles, conduced a genetic analysis on saliva and hair samples from 1209 Melanesian Solomon Island residents. From comparing 43 blond Islanders and 42 brown Islanders, he found that the blondes carried two copies of a mutant gene which is present in 26% of the island’s population. The Melanesian people have a native TYRP1 gene which is partly responsible for the blond hair and melanin, and is totally distinct to that of Caucasians as it doesn’t exist in their genes.

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

It is a recessive gene and is more common in children than in adults, with hair tending to darken as the individual matures.

This contributes to the theories that black Africans were the first homo sapiens and that all races came out of the black African race.

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

Melanesian people of Solomon Islands

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Source: Pulse Nigeria#MELANESIAN PEOPLE #BLACK PEOPLE WITH BLONDE HAIR

Vaturisu to review all Efate customary laws

Daily Post – The Efate Vaturisu Council of Chiefs has mandated itself to review all its customary laws in 2019.

It says this is a priority task for the Council of Chiefs of Efate, during 2019 and will endeavor to accomplish it.

In a statement to the local media, the Vaturisu Council of Chiefs Chairman, Chief Henry Manlaewia, said the newly elected executive of the Vaturisu, had approved the full review of all Efate Customary Laws, during its recent meeting at the Shefa Provincial Council headquarters in Port Vila.

The customary laws of Efate also include all the offshore islands, their customs and traditions.

Once the full review is completed by the Vaturisu Executive Committee, it will be presented to the full Council to be formerly adopted and then presented to the Malvatumauri Council of Chiefs of Vanuatu.

Some of the customary laws highlighted by the Vaturisu Council of Chiefs to be reviewed include; Efate customary land laws, custom governance, marriage, birth, adoption, death, and the related customary laws and various Efate customs, cultural and traditional ways of life.

“We encourage the Chiefs of Efate and the offshore islands to submit proposed reviews they wish to make in the overall review of the Efate Customary Review by the end of March 2019.

“These will be included on the agenda of the Vaturisu Council of Chiefs Review Meeting, scheduled to be held on the Island of Pele in May 2019,” Vaturisu Chairman Chief Henry Manlaewia, urged.

The Vatrurisu Council of Chiefs was the first Chiefly Council in Vanuatu to write and document customary laws, eleven years ago, in 2007.

Vaturisu has a new Secretary General, Chief Jimmy Meameadola, who has been instrumental in the past in assisting both the Vaturisu and the Malvatumauri Council of Chiefs on many customary matters in Vanuatu.

ligo@dailypost.vu