Bell Beaker-Potapovka-Sintashta; archeogenetically 3 peas in a pod, &...
Bell Beaker-Potapovka-Sintashta; archeogenetically 3 peas in a pod, & the1000C test. When one looks in depth at samples to find a common denominator, sometimes it is necessary to break down...
View ArticleIndo-Europeans from Northern India and Central Asia?
I received a PDF from Academia Edu with the title Xiao Zhang Comparative Linguistics [COLOR=#4b4b4b !important][FONT="]Did Old Europeans and Indo-European languages come from Central Asia at...
View ArticleBell Beakers From West to East
An important period of European prehistory is related to the Bell Beaker complex. An interesting study has been published in www dot encyclopedia dot com / humanities /...
View ArticlePIE origins, Proto-Anatolian, Maykop and Kristiansen
Kristiansen, Kristian "The Archaeology of Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Anatolian: Locating the Split" in "Dispersals and Diversification: Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on the...
View ArticleCorded Ware-Formation of their Culture and Language
I don't see anything that people here shouldn't already have heard. See: https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...F48118AFAC191BDFBB1EB30E#.YHON2rfJt5w.twitter "[FONT="]What facilitated this major...
View Articlesupply lines for Bronze to the Nordic Bronze Age
Scandinavia didn't have proper copper nor tin ores. They had to get their bronze through trade. [h=1]Shifting networks and mixing metals: Changing metal trade routes to Scandinavia correlate with...
View ArticleOrigins of the Indo-Europeans: the Uruk expansion and Cucuteni-Trypillian...
The history of the Indo-Europeans is relatively clear from the Maykop and Yamna periods onwards, as I have described in the R1b and R1a pages on this site. The biggest question marks in my head at the...
View ArticleDid Milk help the Indo-European expansion?
We know that Paleolithic and Neolithic Western Europeans were lactose intolerant, as well as many Eastern Europeans who were not R1. But an study showed that among Yamnayas, for example, 94% were...
View ArticleThe Noah/Deluge story and IndoEuropeans
The tale of the deluge has been of great interest for historians and archeologists since modern science began. There are several theories, one being that those events were the filling of the Black Sea...
View ArticleWomen(alone) settled in Orkney in the Early Bronze Age
https://www.heritagedaily.com/2022/...ltered-genetic-landscape-of-orkney/142705?amp A new study has found something unbelievable. That in the Early Bronze Age, instead of the male dominated invasion of...
View ArticleFair features in the indo-european peoples
I can't understand that matter, if the italic peoples had light pigmentation as the celts and the germans.. they all were the same people then why the pictures show the italics darker?
View ArticleThe Eneolithic cemetery at Khvalynsk on the Volga River
New archeological paper about Khvalynsk. Shared by Lazaridis on Twitter. Abstract The genetically attested migrations of the third millennium BC have made the origins and nature of the Yamnaya culture...
View ArticleBronze Age treasures from Hungary
[h=3]See: https://www.heritagedaily.com/2022/08/bronze-age-treasures-found-in-burial-site/144265 "ARCHAEOLOGISTS FROM THE SZENT ISTVÁN KIRÁLY MUSEUM HAVE EXCAVATED BRONZE AGE TREASURES IN A CEMETERY...
View ArticleR1b came as inmigrants to Spain
I will launch this hypothesis because the data that would allow you to determine things like this, needs to be: 1)available, 2)published, 3)and noticed. But this is the only explanation I can imagine...
View ArticleCold Sores dated to the Bronze Age
and the advent of kissing, brought to us perhaps by the steppe people. See: https://www.rte.ie/news/newslens/2022/0728/1312650-spread-of-cold-sores-traced-back-to-bronze-age/ Well, this is something...
View ArticleYamnaya Culture is not Indo-European?
At the suggestion of M. Gimbutas ("Kurgan Hypothesis"), it is generally accepted that the Yamnaya Culture is the source of Indo-European expansion into Europe. But now it is already clear that the...
View ArticleUnetice's lost stronghold
See: https://www.heritagedaily.com/2023/02/archaeologists-find-lost-stronghold-of-unetice-culture/146211 Not so sure there's evidence for their conclusion, but interesting, nonetheless. "The Únětice...
View ArticleWere the Tocharians related to the Tarim mummies ?
Taranis said: Sorry Maciamo, I'm afraid that really makes no sense. Where would the Tocharians come from if they only arrived in the 3rd century AD? No matter which hypothesis you prefer in regard for...
View ArticleThe Bronze Age onset was another collapse
We know of the 'Bronze Age collapse', this is, the end of the Bronze Age in Western Eurasia, where a lot of towns seem to have become uninhabited. But for some reason, in this forum, we don't consider...
View ArticleHow can IE migration be explained without mentioning Seima Turbino?
This is a continuation of my thread, why okunevo culture was ignored? https://www.eupedia.com/forum/threa...o-European-history-they-are-just-paleo-people I really don’t understand why seima turbino...
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