Now, the same researcher has shown that human population growth curves over the past few thousand years match up with both the new Y-chromosome data and biblical event chronology.5

The majority of evolutionary speculation alleges that modern humans didn’t arise until our ancestors migrated out of Africa between 100,000 and 200,000 years ago. However, a number of secular and creationist research studies analyzing a variety of DNA clocks have indicated a far shorter time-scale of not more than 5,000 to 10,000 years.6-9 And a new more precise human Y-chromosome DNA study demonstrates that not only are the previous studies vindicated in their short time predictions, the Bible’s timeline of the global Flood appears to be spot on. In fact, the researcher in the study empirically showed that only about 4,500 years of mutations have accumulated in the DNA record of the human Y chromosome. If mankind has been around for 100,000 to 200,000 years, we should’ve accumulated between 8-59 times the number of mutations actually observed.4

But what about human population growth? Does it match up with these Bible-based timelines and the new genetic data? As it turns out, secular scientists and creationists generally agree on the basic events and population growth models for the past 3,000 years. But when dates get beyond this, there are discrepancies in their models.

Creationist researcher, Nathaniel Jeanson, determined to see how population growth would match up with splits in lineages in Y-chromosome genetic clock data.5 This was possible because this type of genetic data can be analyzed in a tree-like structure. Along this line of reasoning, a biblical timescale predicts that the last 4,500 years of human population growth should be reflected in the branching events of human lineages in the Y chromosome tree data—not just in the lineages represented in the “tips” of the tree. And quite interestingly, the population growth and Y-chromosome data also appear to fit well with specific shifts in population structure in ancient history such as the global famine described during the Bible patriarch Joseph’s life as a ruler in Egypt, as described in the in the later chapters of Genesis. A global famine would dramatically stunt population growth and be detected in genetic branch analyses.

In regards to the importance of these new results, Jeanson told ICR staff,
This adds a second, independent line of evidence to confirm the recent origin of the human race. It preemptively rebuts evolutionary attempts to circumvent the first line of evidence, and it strengthens the initial creationist conclusions.

In summarizing the key challenge this new research presents to the secular science community, Jeanson stated,

It’s been interesting to watch the evolutionists react to these new findings. Or, I should say, fail to react to them. I watched one evolutionist vigorously object online to the first finding, citing a “problem” that I obviously missed. Turns out that the “problem” was the subject of the entire second paper—a paper which showed the “problem” not only had been solved, it had also made evolutionary responses all the more difficult to invoke. No wonder he had no comment about the second paper. It really turns the tables on this debate, putting creationists on the offensive and evolutionists on the defensive.

Indeed, this new study, isn’t only a sound refutation of evolutionary speculation, but a strong confirmation for mankind’s recent origins.