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Human Expansion Timeline Map (With Estimated Total Human Population) In Just 60 Seconds

Last Updated: October 6, 2025 Leave a Comment

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The human expansion timeline map above was created by the amazing mapsinanutshell.

From an estimated population of just 10,000 people 250,000 years ago to 8 billion people today.

Here’s a very brief timeline:

WhenKey expansion milestoneEstimated global population
c. 250 000 y agoAnatomically modern Homo sapiens emerge in East Africa (Omo Kibish, Jebel Irhoud).10k-30k
200 000 – 130 000 y agoGradual spread across African eco-zones; small, mobile bands.still < 0.5 million
130 000 – 100 000 y agoFirst excursions into the Levant (Skhūl, Qafzeh) – a “failed” out-of-Africa.≲ 1 million
~74 000 y agoToba super-eruption triggers a genetic bottleneck; effective population may have shrunk to 3 000 – 10 000 individuals.As few as 3,000 people
70 000 – 50 000 y agoSuccessful recent African origin: a founder group (probably < 1 000 people) leaves via Bab-el-Mandeb or Sinai, hugs the southern Asian coast.10k-30k
60 000 – 50 000 y agoRapid coastal leapfrog to India, Southeast Asia and into Sahul (Australia).≈ 1 million
c. 45 000 y agoArrival in Europe; Upper-Palaeolithic culture flourishes alongside Neanderthals.1 – 5 million
40 000 – 30 000 y agoSettlement of Siberia and arctic Eurasia.≈ 5 million
26 000 – 19 000 y agoLast Glacial Maximum – populations contract into refugia.2 – 4 million
~16 000 – 14 000 y agoCrossing of Beringia and first peopling of the Americas.≈ 5 – 10 million
10 000 BCE (12 k y ago)Holocene warming; independent inventions of agriculture begin (Fertile Crescent, China, New Guinea, Meso-America).≈ 4 million
8 000 BCEFarming spreads; villages appear.≈ 5 million
5 000 BCEFirst cities in Mesopotamia & Nile; plough agriculture.≈ 40 million
3 000 BCEOld Kingdom Egypt, Harappa, early bronze technology.≈ 45 million
1 600 BCEMiddle Bronze Age; long-distance trade across Eurasia.≈ 100 million
c. 1 CEClassical empires (Han, Roman, Mauryan).≈ 300 million
1000 CEMedieval world; Islamic Golden Age, Song China.≈ 270 million
1500 CEEarly modern era; Columbian Exchange begins.≈ 440 million
1750 CEProto-industrial Europe; global commerce intensifies.≈ 770 million
1800 CEIndustrial Revolution hits stride.~ 1 billion
1900 CEFossil-fuel age, modern medicine.≈ 1.6 billion
1950 CEPost-war boom, antibiotics, Green Revolution.≈ 2.5 billion
1980 CEAdvent of personal computing.≈ 4.4 billion
1999 CEWorld passes 6 billion.6 billion
15-Nov-22UN marks the 8-billion milestone.8 billion
Jun-25Latest live estimate.≈ 8.23 billion

Spreading of hominins over the world; including Homo erectus, Homo neanderthalensis, and Homo sapiens

How the planet filled up

  • African roots (≥ 250k years ago). Genetic data imply a breeding population of only a few hundred thousand early H. sapiens living in mosaics of grassland and woodland.
  • First wanderings (130k–100k years ago). Climate pulses opened wet corridors into the Sinai and Arabian peninsulas. Remains at Skhūl and Qafzeh show humans briefly lived outside Africa but probably retreated when aridity returned.
  • The bottleneck & big leap (74k–50k years ago). The Toba eruption and perhaps harsh MIS 4 climate squeezed non-African numbers to the low thousands; soon after, a tiny coastal party carried African DNA around the Indian Ocean and, within 10 000 years, reached Australia.
  • Filling the continents (50k–15k years ago). Hunter-gatherers radiated inland: across Eurasian steppes, into Europe (Aurignacian), then Siberia. Sea levels were lower, so Sahul, Sunda and many western Pacific islands were reachable by short water crossings.
  • Last Ice Age squeeze (26k–19k years ago). Glaciers covered northern Eurasia and North America; people sheltered in warmer pockets—the source of many present-day genetic lineages.
  • Peopling the Americas (16k–14k years ago). Rapid dispersal down the Pacific coast and later through the ice-free corridor populated both American continents in a few millennia.
  • Austronesian wave (c. 3500–1000 BCE). Lapita seafarers carried crops, pigs and chickens from the northern Philippines into Remote Oceania (Tonga, Samoa, Fiji), completing humanity’s reach across the Pacific.
  • Agriculture & urbanism (after 10k years ago). Farming unlocked orders-of-magnitude population growth: from a few million foragers to ~45 million by 3000 BCE and ~300 million by the time of Augustus.
  • Columbian & Industrial accelerations (1500 CE → today). New World crops, industrial energy and modern public-health technologies drove the fastest growth spurt in our species’ history—from <½ billion to >8 billion in just five centuries.

Reading the numbers

  • Deep past = broad ranges. Early figures are reconstructed from genetic diversity and scant archaeological sites; they differ by a factor of two or more across studies.
  • Holocene = better, still fuzzy. Sedentary villages leave clearer traces, but census-style counts begin only with early states like ancient Egypt or Han China.
  • After 1800 = census-based. National head-counts mean uncertainties fall to <2 % globally.

Despite the uncertainty, the trajectory is clear: a tiny African population became a planetary species, and in just the last two centuries entered a demographic regime unlike anything before.

Here’s another map showing the same process titled: Peopling of the world (recent out of Africa and Upper Paleolithic). Figures are in thousands of years ago (kya)

Peopling of the world (recent out of Africa and Upper Paleolithic). Figures are in thousands of years ago (kya)

Map created by Dbachmann
From the map author:

Time is color coded in a scheme of increasing “frequency”, red at 100 kya to violet at 0 kya. Dotted blueish lines are meant to indicate approximate glaciation during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).

Similar map: pleistoproject.wordpress.com

Not shown early and abortive expansions to North Africa [300 kya] and West Asia [270 kya, 130 kya] and possible expansion to China by 120 kya. Possible “Australoid” migration to North Asia [Denisovan admixture] and the Americas by 50 kya (these are speculative/controversial and would detract from the functionality as an “overview map” showing generally-accepted scenarios).

Features shown:

200 kya East Africa [“200” symbolic of early H. sapiens (est. age of mt-haplogroup L ranges around 180 kya, early divergence in Africa as early as 300 kya but cut-off for “anatomically modern” vs. “archaic” is somewhat arbitrary in this case)
130-100 kya expansion within Africa and to the Levant
70 kya “recent Out of Africa” and coastal migrations
65 kya peopling of Oceania
60 kya “Indian” and “Indochina” (Laos) population centers
50 kya “Near Eastern” population center (Emiran)
40 kya “East Asian” population center
40 kya peopling of Europe (Aurignacian 42 kya)
40 kya approximate peopling of Tasmania (add more detail on dispersal in Australia and to Papua?)
35 kya peopling of the Mammoth steppe (Mal’ta–Buret’ culture 24kya)
35 kya Expansion from East Asian population center (Korea 35 kya, Japan possibly 35 kya / certainly by 14 kya, Taiwan between 30 and 20 kya, Cambodia by 20kya [Sơn Vi culture] — but possibly earlier “Austronesian” presence 70kya?)
25 kya Beringia during the LGM
16-14 kya peopling of the Americas just after the LGM (Clovis)
12 peopling of northern Eurasia after the LGM
12 peopling of the Green Sahara [Mali]
4 Paleo-Eskimo expansion to the Arctic (AST = Arctic small tool tradition)
3-1 Austronesian expansion
1 Norse expansion to Iceland

The map only shows the major movements associated with the first lasting “peopling” of the world’s regions:

  • early movements which did not result in lasting populations (such as the early Out of Africa movements before 70kya) are not shown
  • late movements into already populated regions (such as Epipaleolithic and Neolithic migrations associated with Indo-European, Bantu, etc.) are not shown; the Austronesian (Pacific) expansion is shown even though it is much later than such Neolithic movements because it led to the “first peopling” of the Pacific islands.

This might be addressed in updated versions (especially knowledge on the early OOA waves are subject to rapid revision)

Sources:

  • Estimates of historical world population
  • Our World In Data
  • WorldoMeter
  • Early Migration Out of Africa (70,000 B.C.E to 50,000 B.C.E)
  • World Population Estimated at 8 Billion
  • Single exodus from Africa gave rise to today’s non-Africans
  • Human Ancestors Were an Endangered Species
  • UN 2024 Revision of World Population Prospects

Filed Under: History

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