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"Dravida" is itself an Indo-Aryan term describing the southern tip of India and its inhabitants, which does not apply to the geographically diverse AASI and their descendants.
How genetics is settling the Aryan migration debate New DNA evidence is solving the most fought-over question in Indian history. And you will be surprised at how sure-footed the answer is, writes ...
For centuries, historians and linguists have been searching for the cradle of the Indo-Europeans, an ancient people who shaped history and created the world’s largest language family, now spoken ...
Indo-Aryan migration theory, a controversy for the ages, is fueling discussions once more in India after an article published in The Hindu newspaper highlighted the genetic evidence that the ...
A few months ago a friend tipped me off to the fact that David Reich was going to publish a paper about the genetics of Indians which he ascertained was going to model these populations as hybrids ...
Another day, another Harvard genetics paper on the whereabouts of an (I really must stress this) purely *imaginary “Indo-European homeland”—published in Nature, to the applause of alt-right and white ...
A new study claims to have identified the first speakers of Indo-European language, which gave rise to English, Sanskrit and hundreds of others.
Triangulation Of course, linguistics is not alone in making claims about prehistory. Archaeology and ancient DNA genetics in particular also have a lot to tell us about human populations in the ...
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