New thoughts on Indo-Europeans in the light of recent data

Vratyas

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From ancient DNA results it seems as though northern europeans were tan-skinned as late as the mesolithic. They didnt need light skin because their diet was rich in vitamin D. They belonged almost exclusively to Hg I. Many of them had blue eyes but not red or blond hair. They might have inherited blue eyes from neanderthals. We know that neanderthals hunted in low-light conditions and light eyes would have improved their vision in the dark.

The R1a people were in terms of autosomal composition mostly western hunter gatherers with some Karitiana-like admixture. During the last ice age they took refuge in the Ukraine where they developed several shades of blond hair as a result of sexual selection. They also developed pale skin either to produce more vitamin D or also as a result of sexual selection.

The R1b people coming from Mesopotamia/anatolia/gedrosia were among the first farmers and developed pale skin and red hair in response to a shift in diet to vitamin D poor foods. They entered the steppes via the Caucasus and took wives from the R1a people already living there. This explains the high incedence of blue eyes and blonde hair among R1b people today. They were excellent metal workers. Probably the best in the world at that time.


R1a and R1b propogated pale skin into europe in the neolithic. Almost all of the blue eyes in europe today come from north of the black sea though this is probably not where it originated as 8000 year old western hunter gatherers already had blue eyes.
 
During the last ice age they took refuge in the Ukraine

I don't think so, they arrived 15000 years ago, i e after the ice age.

http://archaeology.about.com/od/mterms/g/mezhirich.htm

Like other Dnepr River basin mammoth bone settlements, Mezhirich was first thought to have been occupied between 18,000 and 12,000 years ago, based on early radiocarbon dates. More recent ccelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates suggest a shorter chronology for all mammoth bone settlements, between 15,000 and 14,000 years ago.
 
They were excellent metal workers. Probably the best in the world at that time.

what makes you think so ?

first copper smelting was in the Balkans , 7500 years ago , that was J2b and some G2a
the chiefs on the Pontic steppe got copper artefacts through trade with Cucuteni-Tripolye.
after the collapse of Cucuteni-Tripolye copper mining and copper working was in the Maykop, mainly G2a.

I think though trade between Maykop and Mesopotamia was in the hands of R1b
 
Good summary, Vratyas. I basically agree with everything you wrote.

Bicicleur also made a very good point with the Mezhirich site as potentially marking the arrival of R1a mammoth-hunting tribes from Siberia to south-western Russia.
 
what makes you think so ?

first copper smelting was in the Balkans , 7500 years ago , that was J2b and some G2a
the chiefs on the Pontic steppe got copper artefacts through trade with Cucuteni-Tripolye.
after the collapse of Cucuteni-Tripolye copper mining and copper working was in the Maykop, mainly G2a.

I think though trade between Maykop and Mesopotamia was in the hands of R1b

It is true that early metallurgy (copper, gold, silver) developed first in the Balkans and central Anatolia, most probably with G2a, J2 and E1b1b people. But from the Bronze Age R1a and R1b people became the leaders in metal working technologies. What is particularly amazing among steppe people is not that they developed bronze working early (there is now evidence that the first bronzes might have been made in the Balkans too), but that most of the population seems to have been involved one way or another in bronze working. The so-called 'country of towns' of the Sintashta culture contrasted sharply with contemporaneous West Asian and South Asian civilizations in that every single house showed signs of bronze working. For the early Indo-Europeans metallurgy wasn't the work of a small specialised guild, but a way of life in itself.

Another difference is that steppe people had a far more militaristic use of bronze that Near Eastern societies. The contrast is striking when we compare bronze objects from the Maykop culture, in the Northwest Caucasus, with those of the contemporaneous Kura-Araxes culture, in the South Caucasus and eastern Anatolia. While most Kura-Araxes bronzes were functional (e.g. agricultural) and luxury objects, those from Maykop are overwhelmingly weapons (including the world's earliest swords).

The extreme militarism of steppe Indo-Europeans certainly explains how they managed to conquer such vast territories so quickly, and defeated civilizations that were seemingly more advanced in many other respects.
 
It is true that early metallurgy (copper, gold, silver) developed first in the Balkans and central Anatolia, most probably with G2a, J2 and E1b1b people. But from the Bronze Age R1a and R1b people became the leaders in metal working technologies. What is particularly amazing among steppe people is not that they developed bronze working early (there is now evidence that the first bronzes might have been made in the Balkans too), but that most of the population seems to have been involved one way or another in bronze working. The so-called 'country of towns' of the Sintashta culture contrasted sharply with contemporaneous West Asian and South Asian civilizations in that every single house showed signs of bronze working. For the early Indo-Europeans metallurgy wasn't the work of a small specialised guild, but a way of life in itself.

Another difference is that steppe people had a far more militaristic use of bronze that Near Eastern societies. The contrast is striking when we compare bronze objects from the Maykop culture, in the Northwest Caucasus, with those of the contemporaneous Kura-Araxes culture, in the South Caucasus and eastern Anatolia. While most Kura-Araxes bronzes were functional (e.g. agricultural) and luxury objects, those from Maykop are overwhelmingly weapons (including the world's earliest swords).

The extreme militarism of steppe Indo-Europeans certainly explains how they managed to conquer such vast territories so quickly, and defeated civilizations that were seemingly more advanced in many other respects.

Thank you for the reply. So it seems then that R1a men arrived in the ukraine right after the LGM. What happened to the western hunter gatherer males? Did the R1a's kill them?
 
It is true that early metallurgy (copper, gold, silver) developed first in the Balkans and central Anatolia, most probably with G2a, J2 and E1b1b people. But from the Bronze Age R1a and R1b people became the leaders in metal working technologies. What is particularly amazing among steppe people is not that they developed bronze working early (there is now evidence that the first bronzes might have been made in the Balkans too), but that most of the population seems to have been involved one way or another in bronze working. The so-called 'country of towns' of the Sintashta culture contrasted sharply with contemporaneous West Asian and South Asian civilizations in that every single house showed signs of bronze working. For the early Indo-Europeans metallurgy wasn't the work of a small specialised guild, but a way of life in itself.

Another difference is that steppe people had a far more militaristic use of bronze that Near Eastern societies. The contrast is striking when we compare bronze objects from the Maykop culture, in the Northwest Caucasus, with those of the contemporaneous Kura-Araxes culture, in the South Caucasus and eastern Anatolia. While most Kura-Araxes bronzes were functional (e.g. agricultural) and luxury objects, those from Maykop are overwhelmingly weapons (including the world's earliest swords).

The extreme militarism of steppe Indo-Europeans certainly explains how they managed to conquer such vast territories so quickly, and defeated civilizations that were seemingly more advanced in many other respects.

It seems to me Sintashta took militarism to another level.
I think R1a exploited the copper mines in the Sintashta area but the Sintashta area was territory of other people.
R1a had to defend themselves and the mines and working places from raids by the natives.
The natives (I think N1c1) also learned copper and bronze working.
When the native N1c1 invented a better casting technique, they made holow socketed spearheads which allowed better hafting on the shaft.
Their superior armory caused the Seima-Turbino expansion which is now dated to aprox 2000 BC
From then on militarism and warior culture spread all over Siberia
 
Thank you for the reply. So it seems then that R1a men arrived in the ukraine right after the LGM. What happened to the western hunter gatherer males? Did the R1a's kill them?

when R1a arrived 15000 years ago, they were mammoth hunters
I think Southern Russia and the Ukraine where largely uninhabited when they arrived

when the mammoths got extinct, R1a had to leave the forest zone to I2a1b (I think) hunter/gatherers and they stayed in the rivervalleys on the Pontic steppe
they survived on a diet of 50 % fish from the rivers and 50 % meat, mainly horse meat

I wonder how and when R1b could infiltrate into the Pontic steppe
From what we know about IE language it must have been before the invention of the wheel
 
Thank you for the reply. So it seems then that R1a men arrived in the ukraine right after the LGM. What happened to the western hunter gatherer males? Did the R1a's kill them?

I suppose you mean the eastern hunter gatherer males. They were not necessarily killed. I doubt that hunter-gathering societies had the power to wage wars resulting in a lot of casualties. Most conflicts between tribes were merely territorial skirmishes that involved a lot of show and some injuries, but rarely mass killings.

One feature of hunter-gathering societies is that they were very mobile, especially in regions where there were seasonal migrations of animals.

The tribes living in the Pontic-Caspian steppes around the LGM would probably have moved into Central Europe after the ice sheets receded, leaving a vacuum for Siberian R1a tribes to move in. It is more likely that an actual "invasion" of R1a hunters, who lived in tribes of a few dozen people at most (extended families). Back then a "war" would have been of an order of scale of ten men against ten men, who would have fought with wood-and-silex spears or primitive arrows (like some Amazonian tribes today). This is why the first true wars only started in the metal age, especially from the Bronze Age, since copper is too soft to make large axes or any sword blades.
 
It seems to me Sintashta took militarism to another level.
I think R1a exploited the copper mines in the Sintashta area but the Sintashta area was territory of other people.
R1a had to defend themselves and the mines and working places from raids by the natives.
The natives (I think N1c1) also learned copper and bronze working.
When the native N1c1 invented a better casting technique, they made holow socketed spearheads which allowed better hafting on the shaft.
Their superior armory caused the Seima-Turbino expansion which is now dated to aprox 2000 BC
From then on militarism and warior culture spread all over Siberia

Interesting theory. But if they Seima-Turbino expansion was led by N1c1 people, why is it that southern Russia and Ukraine have hardly any N1c1 today ? And how did Late Bronze Age Scythian cultures in Siberia, following immediately the Seima-Turbino expansion, have yielded essentially R1a Y-DNA ?

Besides the Seima-Turbino phenomenon was linked to the Srubna (aka Timber-grave) culture in the steppes, which was the natural successor of the Catacomb culture, and probably the culture from which the Cimmerians descended.
 
when R1a arrived 15000 years ago, they were mammoth hunters
I think Southern Russia and the Ukraine where largely uninhabited when they arrived

when the mammoths got extinct, R1a had to leave the forest zone to I2a1b (I think) hunter/gatherers and they stayed in the rivervalleys on the Pontic steppe
they survived on a diet of 50 % fish from the rivers and 50 % meat, mainly horse meat

I wonder how and when R1b could infiltrate into the Pontic steppe
From what we know about IE language it must have been before the invention of the wheel

My understanding is that R1a tribes remained in the forest-steppe (richer in game for hunting), while R1b cattle herders settled the open steppe (ideal for cattle grazing) in the Neolithic.

I2a people would have moved to Central Europe, mainly around the Carpathians and Poland, after the LGM.
 
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I suppose you mean the eastern hunter gatherer males. They were not necessarily killed. I doubt that hunter-gathering societies had the power to wage wars resulting in a lot of casualties. Most conflicts between tribes were merely territorial skirmishes that involved a lot of show and some injuries, but rarely mass killings.

One feature of hunter-gathering societies is that they were very mobile, especially in regions where there were seasonal migrations of animals.

The tribes living in the Pontic-Caspian steppes around the LGM would probably have moved into Central Europe after the ice sheets receded, leaving a vacuum for Siberian R1a tribes to move in. It is more likely that an actual "invasion" of R1a hunters, who lived in tribes of a few dozen people at most (extended families). Back then a "war" would have been of an order of scale of ten men against ten men, who would have fought with wood-and-silex spears or primitive arrows (like some Amazonian tribes today). This is why the first true wars only started in the metal age, especially from the Bronze Age, since copper is too soft to make large axes or any sword blades.

What puzzles me is that indo-europeans are europoid ( for the most part ) but they belong to mongoloid paternal lines. How did this come about ?
 
My understanding is that R1b tribes remained in the forest-steppe (richer in game for hunting), while R1b cattle herders settled the open steppe (ideal for cattle grazing) in the Neolithic.

I2a people would have moved to Central Europe, mainly around the Carpathians and Poland, after the LGM.

yes, I wonder, R1b - M73 it doesn't make sense that they came from Anatolia
where R1b - M73 also mammoth hunters who stayed in the forests after mammoth extinction?
 
Interesting theory. But if they Seima-Turbino expansion was led by N1c1 people, why is it that southern Russia and Ukraine have hardly any N1c1 today ? And how did Late Bronze Age Scythian cultures in Siberia, following immediately the Seima-Turbino expansion, have yielded essentially R1a Y-DNA ?

Besides the Seima-Turbino phenomenon was linked to the Srubna (aka Timber-grave) culture in the steppes, which was the natural successor of the Catacomb culture, and probably the culture from which the Cimmerians descended.

I must admit, I don't know much about Seima-Turbino.
Can you direct me to some info on the subject?
I read somewhere hollow socketed spearheads were forged (a socket for good hafting on the shaft)
Soon after these hollow socketed spearheads were casted, and it gave the people with this technique a tremendous military advance.

Indeed, N1c1 did not come to steppes, they made a more northernly expansion.
If N1c1 had this advantage, how were they stopped on the steppes ?
Maybe they didn't have horses or war charriots?
The spear would have been a lance, for footsoldiers?
 
Why the indoeuropeans when we know that EEF were light skinned..
 
Why the indoeuropeans when we know that EEF were light skinned..
I cant link to an image because i dont have ten posts yet but do a google search for skin color distribution and you will see that generally the higher the EEF component the darker the skin in europeans.
 
My understanding is that R1b tribes remained in the forest-steppe (richer in game for hunting), while R1b cattle herders settled the open steppe (ideal for cattle grazing) in the Neolithic.

I2a people would have moved to Central Europe, mainly around the Carpathians and Poland, after the LGM.

I assume you meant to say that the R1a tribes remained in the forest-steppe while R1b cattle herders settled the open steppe in the Neolithic.

I'm not seeing a lot of evidence that R1b folk were on the steppes, in terms of modern DNA evidence. Although I know you have an explanation for that, I still wonder about it. And it seems to me that J2 must have been a fairly significant par of the IE expansion. I know you've said J2 was probably present, but as a minor player. But how did J2 get there? As part of Maykop?
 
I cant link to an image because i dont have ten posts yet but do a google search for skin color distribution and you will see that generally the higher the EEF component the darker the skin in europeans.

Absolutely;
According to Lazaridis et al 2013 - the Neolithic-farmers (Stuttgart) were lighter-skinned than the Hunter-gatherers (Loschbour);
But the Indo-Europeans (when they finally sequence one) must be in-turn lighter-skinned than the Neolithic-farmers;

There is a clear North-South cline in Europe;

Lucotte et Yuasa 2011 + Norton2007
http://www.academicjournals.org/article/article1379514057_Lucotte and Yuasa pdf.pdf
 
I cant link to an image because i dont have ten posts yet but do a google search for skin color distribution and you will see that generally the higher the EEF component the darker the skin in europeans.
But for example Finns would have low levels of indoeuropean input (low levels of R1a+R1b) , as well as low levels of EEF....yet they are as light as their Scandianvian peers...
 
But for example Finns would have low levels of indoeuropean input (low levels of R1a+R1b) , as well as low levels of EEF....yet they are as light as their Scandianvian peers...

The centre of gravity of haplogroup R1a in Finland is situated in Finnish-speaking Ostrobothnia (29 %) and to a lesser extent in Bothnia(21 %). Surprisingly, the percentage is lower (8 %) in Swedish-

speaking Ostrobothnia. A pigmentantion map by G. Gerland shows that northern Finns ( where R1a is almost 0%) do have yellow skin.
 

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