A new genetic analysis reveals a massive migration from the central Asian grasslands into Europe 4500 years ago—implying that some languages followed. Christopher Intagliata reports.
March 10, 2015
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Modern tend to share their names with the places they're spoken. Swedish: Sweden. German: Germany. And so on. But where'd they come from before that? One theory is the 'Anatolian hypothesis,' Anatolia referring roughly to the Asian part of Turkey. "So the proposal was that it was agriculturalists from the near east and present-day Turkey and Cyprus who were bringing agriculture to Europe. And that this mass movement of people bringing , also brought languages." David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School.
Now Reich and his colleagues have analyzed the DNA found in the remains of 94 ancient Europeans. And this molecular evidence does indeed point to a migration from the steppe into central Europe about 4500 years ago. "And it's a massive event—at least three-quarters of the population got replaced by people who are never in that part of continental Europe before." The finding is in the journal . [Wolfgang Haak et al, ]
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