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Geographical issues. The origin of the Yamato nation in Japan.

Exactly when the Yamato nation was formed and where their ancestors came from have long been impossible to trace in the vague epics and diverse legends. What is now certain is that a sustained and growing migration to Japan began sometime as early as BC. The immigrants are mostly yellow-skinned Mongolians, mainly composed of the Tungus people from Siberia and Northeast China, the Malays from the Nanyang Islands, the Indochinese people from the Indochina Peninsula, the Wuyue people from the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, and the Han and Korean people. They went down the Korean Peninsula, crossed the strait, and landed on this volcanic island at the end of East Asia, where the first light of dawn always appeared. In 1979, Kenzaburo Torigoe, emeritus professor of anthropology at Osaka University of Education, Japan, was the first to publish a new theory that "the birthplace of the Japanese is in Yunnan Province, China." On February 23, 1984, Professor Torigoe Ken, who is dedicated to the study of social and human culture, announced: "A field investigation was conducted on the ethnic minorities in the Thai mountainous area (northern Thailand) who are thought to have traveled south from Yunnan, and as a result, all babies were found. There are fetal spots on the buttocks." Professor Torigoe emphasized this discovery: "The physical birth spots of the Japanese originate from Yunnan. This is circumstantial evidence that proves that this area is the birthplace of the Japanese.