The Indo-Aryan question nearing resolution


India Today published my review of the current state of the genetics and genomics of the Indian subcontinent, and what it can tell us about the ethnogenesis of South Asians generally. In the piece I tried to be very circumspect and stick to what we know with a high, if not perfect, degree of certainty. Here I will add some comments where I reduce the threshold of certainty somewhat. That is, I’m going to include here my beliefs where I think I’m right, but in some details wouldn’t be surprised if I was wrong.

First, the title is Aryan wars: Controversy over new study claiming they came from the west 4,000 years ago. Writers don’t get to choose titles, and this is not one I would have chosen. But I am not in a position to care or know what draws clicks. Let’s note that this “controversy” is restricted mostly to India. Outside of India it’s not controversial, but a matter of the science, because people don’t have any political or social investment in the topic. It reminds me of debates about genetics and intelligence in the West, where emotions get overwrought and lies fly wildly with abandon.*

Second, there is a reference in the figures to an “Out of India” (OIT)  model. That is, the Aryans migrated out of India, and implicitly the Indo-European languages derive from South Asia. I don’t think this theory has any support at all. That is, I think it is rather clear that proto-Indo-European probably emerged neither in Europe proper, nor in South Asia, but in the Inner Eurasian spaces between. But for an Indian audience ignoring OIT would seem a peculiar lacunae, so there was a reference added to the figure on that account (I pushed back against this, but do not make ultimate decisions on figures).

But I do think it was plausible up until 2009’s Reconstructing Indian History to suggest that most modern South Asian ancestry dates to the Pleistocene. In this framework the Indo-Europeanization of the subcontinent was primarily a cultural one, where small groups of Central Asians imposed their language on the native population. What the genome-wide work has shown is that South Asians are the product of a large-scale mixing process between a population very distant from West Eurasians (“Ancestral South Indians”, ASI) and a population which was indistinguishable from other West Eurasians (“Ancestral North Indians”, ANI).

Since ANI is indistinguishable from West Eurasians I hold it is clearly a West Eurasian population in provenance. Those who reject this position from a scientific perspective believe that there could have been some sort continuous zone of “ANI-like” habitation from northwestern South Asia up into northern Inner Eurasia (and perhaps toward West Asia as well) dating from the late Pleistocene. I do not that believe this is plausible, and I will tell you that prominent researchers who I have brought up this idea to are somewhat incredulous.**

Third, there are major unresolved issues genetically in relation to the dates and the total number of mixing populations. I am quite confident saying around half of the total South Asian genomic ancestry today derives from populations who were living outside of South Asia on the Holocene-Pleistocene boundary 11,700 years ago. Much of that ancestry probably flourished between the Caucasus and Zagros mountains. The remainder somewhere in the vast swath of territory between the Baltic and Siberia (perhaps further south, toward the Pamirs?).

But I am not confident of the relative balances of contribution to the ANI. It does seem that the northern component, which is derived in part from the southern component, is much more prominent in upper castes and northwestern populations. In contrast the southern component is found throughout the subcontinent.

In Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the Near East there is analysis of South Asia in the supplements. The author concludes that ANI can not be modeled as a single population (Zack Ajmal and I were saying this in 2010). The top hits for the sources of ANI tend to be the genomic sample from the Zagros, in western Iran (before subsequent admixture with Levantine farmers), and a population similar to the Yamna culture of the steppe. The issue seems to be that later steppe populations which harbor a fair amount of “Early European Farmer” ancestry (e.g., LBK in Central Europe) due likely to back migration aren’t good model fits.

Below are two plots, one showing a scatter of South Asian groups with their Iran_N (a sample from ~10,000 years ago) vs. Yamna (from ~5,000 years ago), and another with the ratios.

   

DO NOT TAKE THE PROPORTIONS LITERALLY.  My intuition is that these models are overestimating the proportion of steppe ancestry, but my confidence in my intuition is low.

There are two groups enriched for Iran_N ancestry:

  1. Lower caste groups, especially from South India.
  2. Populations in southern Pakistan.

The reasons differ. If you have done genetic analysis of the Pakistani populations it seems quite obvious that unlike other groups in South Asia Pakistani groups facing the Arabian sea across from Oman have genuine Near Eastern ancestry. This affinity declines as you go north in Pakistan rather rapidly. Notice though one South Indian group: Jews from Cochin. This population clearly has recent Near Eastern ancestry.

The Kharia are an Austro-Asiatic Munda group. For whatever reason Austro-Asiatic groups seem to consistently have very little steppe ancestry. The Mala are Dalits from South India. The further up you go on the modal Iran_N-Yamna cline you see the populations are either upper caste, or, they are from the far northwest of the subcontinent.

The conclusion I derive from this is that first there was an early migration of West Eurasian populations consisting of Iranian farmers. This group mixed with the ASI element. The Indo-Aryans, which probably correlates with the Yamna-like component, arrived later as an overlay (and nearly half of their ancestry was derived from Iranian farmers). Then many South Asian populations have modifications on this base model of compound ANI + ASI; Munda and Bengali have later East Asian ancestry, while populations on the Arabian sea have Near Eastern ancestry.

Fourth, the story in India Today leans heavily on Y chromosome of R1a1a lineage. It is true we are Lords of the Steppe and destined to drive our enemies before us. But, it is not the primary story. And yet Y chromosomal phylogenies are easy for the public to understand. But they only make sense in light of the above framework. R1a1a is found in South Indian tribal populations. It seems likely that Indo-Aryan paternal lineages were highly invasive across the subcontinent, just as they were in Europe. In many cases they likely extended far beyond domains where Indo-European acculturation occurred.

I’m probably wrong on some of the details. But I suspect the final story will not be so different from this.

Finally, I will mention the cultural element here. There is a fair amount of the discussion of the form “so you are saying the ancestors of Indians are Europeans?” or “does this mean Hinduism is not Indian?”

The piece was about genetics and demography, not my opinions about culture. So I will say this:

  1. The “West” as an entity is no older that Classical Greece. 500 BC. My own personal position, strongly held, is that the West should indicate cultures and societies which descend from the European societies which adhered to the Western Church around ~1000 AD (some nations, like Lithuania, became absorbed into this cultural complex hundreds of years later). So Russia is not the West. And Merovingian Francia is not the West.
  2. Indian civilization of what we term the Hindu variety coalesced in the period between between 500 BC and 500 AD, from before the Mauryas, up to the Guptas. Obviously the period before 1000 BC was important in setting the ground-work, but I do not believe it was Indian as we’d understand it in anything but the geographical sense, nor was it Hindu in any way we’d recognize it today (similarly, Shang dynasty China was not China as we’d understand, which came into being after 500 BC).

These positions mean that I think nationalist passions are in the “not even wrong” category. Indian Hindu civilization is indigenous by definition, since it was synthesized in situ on the edge of historical perception and attestation (for the record, I think Adi Shankara was critical in the completion of a crystalized self-conception of Hindu religio-philosophical thought, but its origins predate him). Similarly, Indian civilization was not seeded by white Europeans because white Europeans were only coming into being in Europe when the Indus Valley civilization was collapsing.

That is all (for now).

Addendum: The first tranche of ancient DNA should be out in a few months. Also, there is another paper on Indian genetics in the work from the usual suspects. There won’t be anything totally surprising (or so I’ve been told).

* By lies, I mean the contention that intelligence is an “invalid” instrument in relation to predictiveness, or, if it is valid, it is not genetically heritable. People routinely lie about these facts in discussion or spread lies because there are socially preferred positions which they conform to. Similarly, many questions about Indian history seem to hinge on widely promoted lies.

** This model needs to also confront the massive mixing of the last 4,000 years. If it is true then it is ASI which is mostly likely intrusive, because it is not creditable that these two populations were in nearby proximity for tens of thousands of years without exchanging genes.

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Violet in Twilight
Violet in Twilight
6 years ago

Razib, Congrats on a clear and succinct article in India Today. It was a great read. Couple of questions:
1. Is the graphic true representation of R1a1a densities? It appears most of densely populated zone has >60% and yet in The Hindu, it said something like 17% of total are R1a1a. Which one is true? (what about L, J and H?)

2. It is unclear to me why is ANI and R1a1a are treated as equivalent. If I understand your post here (and from your previous ones) ANI arrived long before ~4k BP but the latest admixture event is at ~4K BP per Moorjani et al. But R1a1a was distinct from other R1a around that time. So, the latest ANI arrival could be R1a1a but that doesn’t mean there wasn’t any ANI before, did I get it right?

3. Did all of R1a1a arrived at once in India? It is clear that there were a lot of people pushing through Kyber and Bolan passes and landed in India until Vasco de Gama figured out another way. So, how was R1a1a spread is considered to end at ~4k BP and not continue up to the historical period (or even due to Islamic rule)?

This is the confusing part for me, as it appears that ANI –> 10k-4k BP arrivals, and R1a1a –> 4k-500 BP arrivals (including Islamic invasions which are male dominated). How does one know R1a1a in present populations didn’t come at a later date, particularly if they are mixing with their own ancestors who were mixed at an earlier date?

Omega01
Omega01
6 years ago

No, the statement by journalist in old article was wrong. Here is what the geneticists K. Thangaraj and Chaubey replayed to that journalists article.

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/too-early-to-settle-the-aryan-migration-debate/article19265947.ece

“India is a nation of close to 4,700 ethnic populations, including socially stratified communities, many of which have maintained endogamy (marrying within the community) for thousands of years, and these have been hardly sampled in the Y chromosome analysis led by Silva et al., and so do not provide an accurate characterisation of the R1a frequencies in India (several tribal populations carry substantial frequency of haplogroup R1a).

Equally important to understand is that the Y chromosome phylogeny suffered genetic drift (lineage loss), and thus there is a greater chance to lose less frequent R1a branches, if one concentrates only on specific populations, keeping in mind the high level of endogamy of the Subcontinent. These are extremely important factors one should consider before making any strong conclusions related to Indian populations.

The statement made by Silva et al. that 17.5% of Indians carry R1a haplogroup actually means that 17.5% of the samples analysed by them (those who live in U.K. and U.S.) carry R1a, not that 17.5% of Indians carry R1a!

We agree that the major Indian R1a1 branch, i.e. L657, is not more than 5,000 years old. However, the phylogenetic structure of this branch cannot be considered as a derivative of either Europeans or Central Asians. The split with the European is around 6,000 years and thereafter the Asian branch (Z93) gave rise to the South Asian L657, which is a brother branch of lineages present in West Asia, Europe and Central Asia. Such kind of expansion, universally associated with most of the Y chromosome lineages of the world, as shown in 2015 by Monika Karmin et al., was most likely due to dramatic decline in genetic diversity in male lineages four to eight thousand years ago (Genome Research, 2015; 4:459-66). Moreover, there is evidence which is consistent with the early presence of several R1a branches in India (our unpublished data).”

K. Thangaraj is with the CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad and G. Chaubey is with the Estonian Biocentre in Tartu, Estonia.

We will need ancient DNA to confirm various population movements.

Violet in Twilight
Violet in Twilight
6 years ago
Reply to  Omega01

Omega01,

Yes, I have read Thangaraj and Chaubey’s article too. Their article points out the sampling issues but does not give out a total number. Wikipedia lists the sample sizes used and ratios of different Y-haplogroups in India for different population groups and eyeballing them didn’t lead me to think 60% was the norm. So, nobody else gave a reliable value of what is R1a1a % for the entire country and had to go with a published number.
Perhaps there is a better source with good sampling that you know?

Omega01
Omega01
6 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Lazaridie et al 2016 study clearly states Eastern European Hunter-Gatherers (EHG) are 75% ANE, a population on Onge->Han cline.

Violet in Twilight
Violet in Twilight
6 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Razib,

Thanks so much for clarifying my questions. Your detail really helped me put together what was going on with different publications over these past two years. Sometimes these things only make sense if you play with PCA and all the data. That’s why I appreciated the plot with Iran_Neo and Yamnaya and all the populations plotted on it. It helped a lot to see that Mala, Gujarati and North Brahmin on almost a straight line at ~20% Iran_N.

Also, thanks for the explanation about R1a1a. Now I understand why R1a1a is tied with Yamnaya arrival and not later ones.

ANI-1 –> almost same as Iran_N
ANI-2 –> Yamnaya like –> NEF + EHG –> w1 * NEF + w2* WHG + w3*ANE
(w = some kind of weighting, NEF = near eastern farmers?)

It would probably couple more years before I would understand what’s in Yamnaya vs. Zargos farmers and ANE properly. 🙂

I wish more was done to understand ASI in such detail.

SV
SV
6 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

“in india the indus vally civ. may already have been multi-ethnic with indo-aryan and dravidian elements (and perhaps others?). its collapse seems to have triggered massive migrations and demographic flux.”

Isn’t this arguing against the conventional Aryan Migration Theory (see wikipedia)? AMT posits that Indo-Aryans migrated to India from BMAC after 1800 BC. According to AMT, the Indo-Iranians of Sintashta (2000 BC) who were the inventors of the war chariot moved into BMAC around 2000-1800 BC and borrowed some of their religious practices and split into Indo-Aryans and Iranians. The Indo-Aryans then migrated to both India and Syria (Mittani).
If Indus valley (3300-2000 BC) is already a mixture of Indo-Aryans and Dravidians doesn’t this take the current AMT out of the picture?

froginthewell
froginthewell
6 years ago

Violet’s question and your reply have answered some of my questions (thank you), but more remain (writing many hoping you or some other knowledgeable commentator like Rick might answer one or two):

1. How does one know that the AN2 migration as you put it in your reply was mostly male? Couldn’t it be that equal numbers of males and females arrived but thanks to polygyny those males left a far wider genetic imprint than their females? Under this hypothesis, the number of people who arrived should be much smaller than naively suggested by the percentage of R1a1a among modern Indians.

2. If it is not exactly clear in what proportion to model ANI (Yamna vs near east) what does “percentage of ANI ancestry” mean? And is this notion defined using Y-chromosomal or autosomal data?

3. Do you think R1a1a accounts for all the Y-chromosomes of the AN2, or would you expect middle eastern Y-groups to have arrived along with them?

4. Can’t our picture of how many migrated be skewed by something like how upper classes in Europe survived famines/plagues there better? Especially considering the aridization of the Thar desert? Of course, this possibility applies only if the AN2 fellows came during the mature Harappan phase and became elites in the society; say due to skin color or poetry or so. Then there can be the “germs” of the “guns, germs and steel”.

5. Is it known how many dead Indus guys are being sampled either in the forthcoming paper or the larger investigation to follow; at least, is it likely to be statistically significant? I ask because I remember reading that archaeologists had found (long back) many different kinds of skeletons in Harappa.

6. The bit in your reply about the genetic characteristics of Indians having been fixed 2000 years ago: reminds me of Arrian of Xenophon: “The appearance of the inhabitants, too, is not so far different in India and Ethiopia; the southern Indians resemble the Ethiopians a good deal, and, are black of countenance, and their hair black also, only they are not as snub-nosed or so woolly-haired as the Ethiopians; but the northern Indians are most like the Egyptians in appearance.” I wonder if the present day Indians would be described this way.

(Flippant addendum: I can’t help but mentally fictionalize it in parallel to modern politics:
(a) During the mature Harappan era, say 2300 BC, refugees from war-torn cultures visit Harappa.
(b) The Harappan liberals of the time support the migration saying that Harappa was built by migrants from the near east who introduced revolutionary farming technologies.
(c) Gradually the migrants “Eurabianize” Harappa and the civilization goes to ruin, while keeping the language and cultural values of the invaders :P).

froginthewell
froginthewell
6 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Thank you for both the explanations.

Min mini pucci
Min mini pucci
6 years ago

I have mentioned before, on Razib’s blog when he was at Unz.com , that I think Dravidians were also an ANI group because non Brahmin South Indians have ANI but not the North East European component that is found in Brahmins and North Indians.

“in india the indus vally civ. may already have been multi-ethnic with indo-aryan and dravidian elements (and perhaps others?). its collapse seems to have triggered massive migrations and demographic flux.”

My hunch is the Aryans came in at the tail end of the Indus Civ. and contributed to its collapse, but natural factors would have also played a role. The Spanish did destroy Mayan culture but Mayans moved away from their cities well before the Spaniards arrived (classic Maya collapse).

The estimated time of arrival of the Aryans and the collapse of the IVC is too close to be coincidental. The older Indology books did mention that Aryans conquered cities inhabited by dark skinned snub nosed short people who spoke a foreign tongue, but that they also found some people who looked like them, and they tried to live in the cities but ultimately gave up and abandoned them.

The most plausible scenario is a gradual intrusion , colonization and assimilation ; somewhat akin to colonization of the Americas by Europeans. There could have been an Indo-Iranian group that entered South Asia before the Aryans, just as Vikings landed in Newfoundland before the Pilgrims arrived in N.E. America.

In Iran we see that the Indo-Iranians did not wipe out the Elamite, instead Elamite continued to be spoken even after Indo-Iranians conquered the region but eventually it ceased existing. Same with the Akkadian conquest of Sumeria, where Sumerian continued to be spoken for awhile. Brahui used to be spoken in Sistan & Balochistan until late last century; last I read Brahui speakers (in Iran) switched over to Balochi.

matt
matt
6 years ago

Razib,

What you mentioned is similar to below on eurogenes

http://eurogenes.blogspot.com/2016/10/the-peopling-of-south-asia-illustrated.html

Omega01
Omega01
6 years ago
Reply to  matt

I highly doubt Mesolithic South Asians will be “isolated” group. I’m certain they will already be admixed forgers on ASI-ANE cline.

kaushik
kaushik
6 years ago

I think the map is inaccurate with respect to South India though. r1a frequencies should be higher along the west coast rather than along the east. In the only study I’ve seen that included the ezhava, a demographically dominant OBC group from kerala r1a frequencies amongst them were 25%, it probably occurs at similar or higher frequencies in amongst the dominant upper caste group, the nairs. On the other hand amongst the tamils r1a has a frequency of only around 10% amongst most caste groups

BK
BK
6 years ago
Reply to  kaushik

Yep Kerala r1a1 R2 and J2 are the most dominant paternal lineages. Maps are always lazy when it comes to south India:
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/kerala/default.aspx?section=yresults
Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra would be even higher looking at their phenotypes

ASI definitely peaks in the south-east in Telugu and Tamils which is probably their ancestral homeland or intrusion point into the subcontinent

Yessir
Yessir
6 years ago

There are many Brahui speakers in Pakistani Balochistan and settled in Sindh province for some time. They related surname is usually written in English as Brohi.

Prashanth
Prashanth
6 years ago

Here is a radical alternate perspective:
Look at ancient Egypt, it is located on the Nile river delta and a bit of the lower stem of the river.
Look at the ancient mesopotamia, it is centred around junction of Eptatretus and Tigris rivers.
The first one I would call as distributary civilisation, as it was located close to the delta.
Ancient mesopotamia was on the other hand was a tributary river valley civilisation.
Indus and the Saraswathi; both had a large number of tributaries and a significant delta with a long stem separating the deltaic region with the tributary region to the north.
Two separate sets of civilisation developed, one in the deltaic region (Sind and Gujarat state of India) and the other in the tributary region (Punjab, Haryana).
This explains why ancient Indians talked of Pancha Dravida (Karnataka (Kannada Brahmins)
Talianga (Telugu Brahmins)
Dravida (Brahmins of Tamil Nadu and Kerala)
Maharashtraka (Maharashtrian Brahmins)
Gurjara (Gujarati Brahmins) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancha-Dravida and Pancha Gowda (Saraswat
Gauda
Kanyakubja
Maithila
Utkala), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancha-Gauda.
If in prehistory Saraswati was a much larger river than Sindu, with its delta at the rann of kutch, it makes pretty much sence.
Both the above civilisations had ANI and ASI in different proportions, one more ASI than the other.
Both of them traded and imported ideas from one other, while speaking in languages from different language families (Dravidian and Indo-Aryan).
Slowly the Indo Aryan language become more prominent and the delta population also adopted it. Dravidian language got confined to the then dravidian back waters of south India.

This theory explains:
1) Gujarat and Maharashtra brahmins being classified among Pancha dravida by the ancient Indians.
2) Grandeur of river Saraswati in the vedas, as the largest of all rivers.
3) Artificial nature of Classical Sanskrit, it was probably a language developed by using some scientific method of classification of sound, grammar etc. to create a unifying language for both Dravidian and Indo- Aryan languages. It also explains presence of Dravidian root words in Sanskrit.
4) Easy explanation for the presence of Brahui language in Baluchistan, as the area is contiguous to the delta area of Sindhu and Saraswati rivers (Pancha Dravida areas).
5) There were two ANI entry points one from eastern Europe and steppes into tributary portion of the rivers. Another one on the coast into Sind and Gujarat, from Iran and the middle east.
6) More migration happened from tributary areas of the rivers in the north to delta areas on the south at a later date.
7) The migration into india from the steppes continued for much longer time to the tributary (northern) region of the river valley.
8) Also note that ancient Egypt had upper and lower Egypt and they were unified later.

What is your opinion Razib? How does it gel with genetics?

BK
BK
6 years ago
Reply to  Prashanth

I have similar beliefs to the above

Min mini pucci
Min mini pucci
6 years ago

Re. the Rakhigarhi aDNA

Any idea how old they are ? If the aDNA is from the late phase of IVC, from early 2nd millenium BC or very late 3rd millenium BC, I would not be surprised to find these is some R1a1a.

Would need aDNA from 2500bc (supposed to haven been when IVC reached its height) and earlier to form a picture that is far less misleading than aDNA from just before the collapse.

Re. Brahui origins
Yes the linguisitc argument is that since they don’t have Avestan input, they were later migrants from the subcontinent proper. The genetic analysis I recal from Zack’s blog shows them to have less of the South Asian component than the neighboring Baloch, which conflicts with the theory they are post Avestan migrants from peninsula India.

I do recal reading here on BP, that some Brahui are actually just assimilated Baloch. The Brahui were dominant near Kalat at at time, being rulers/Khans of Kalat.

Back in the late 90s/ 00s I read a little excerpt in a travel guide book on Pakistan that stated the Brahui recalled coming from Aleppo. This was confusing to me because I had never read this anywhere else. Some years later I read that the Baloch came from Aleppo, and that’s when I realized that the source of the Brahui claims in the travel guide book must have been a Baloch who assimilated .

DNA testing from Brahui graves would be something to look forward to.

BK
BK
6 years ago
Reply to  Min mini pucci

agreed, Brahui look like assimilated Baloch, however they along with lower-caste Punjabis and Sindhis have the highest iranian farmer element according to Zack Ajmals admixture plot.

These cultures are all within promixity of the IVC in southern Pakistan/Makran coast

I’d still guess that Brahui are the closest thing to the original Dravidians, although they have recent Baloch admixture

Either that or Baloch are Iranianised ancient Dravidians… one of the two

BK
BK
6 years ago
Reply to  BK

Actually i go with Baloch are iranianised Dravidians because they have ANI whereas it is low to nonexistent in neighbouring Persians

TheTruthIsOutThere!
TheTruthIsOutThere!
6 years ago

“There are two groups enriched for Iran_N ancestry:
1.Lower caste groups, especially from South India.
2.Populations in southern Pakistan.”

In all these postings I see plenty of usage of the word “Indo-aryan”, this (Iran_N ancestry) seems to indicate the other group in India, “indo-dravidians”. Not only does this give more credence to a dravidian type ancestry stretching from Elam to India, but also bolstering theories of the original inhabitants of the IVC. I see plenty of responses from the hindutva/OIT leaning persuasion, and accusations from some of these posters about the a supposedly vociferous dravidian nationalist element from the south, but I have heard nary a peep from this other group (so called dravidian nationalists). I’d like to hear also about dravidians as well, as they are the other major component of Indian ancestry that seems to be either ignored or attacked for having their identity.

BK
BK
6 years ago

Modern Dravidians speak the language of ANI/Elam/Ancient Iran but are overwhelmingly genetically ASI (who do not speak Dravidian natively). They carry ANI through the J2/R2 y-dna paternal line, but this is more common among upper-caste Dravidians

I think the question youre trying to ask is, who are the blackies and where did they come from, what language did they speak etc, cos it wasnt Dravidian

TheTruthIsOutThere
TheTruthIsOutThere
6 years ago
Reply to  BK

BK: “I think the question youre trying to ask is, who are the blackies and where did they come from, what language did they speak etc, cos it wasnt Dravidian”

No BK, that was NOT my question AT ALL! I know you’re trying to be flippant, but tread carefully, your comments are very informative and this site is great, I just don’t want some annoying extreme left liberal try to impugn this site or you, for having racist comments (I’m centrist Liberal on most things, conservative on some, and can’t stand the extreme left, or extreme right for that matter)

My questions again relate only to the Dravidian ancestry, whether they were dark skinned or light skinned is irrelevant.

Thank you btw the way for your helpful comments:

“They carry ANI through the J2/R2 y-dna paternal line, but this is more common among upper-caste Dravidians”

To borrow from Razib’s designation, ANI2 is Indo-Aryan and ANI1 is Dravidian.

I share the theory that Razib has (at least that’s what I think I read) in that as Dravidians spread through India, the more south they went the more ASI they picked up. As Indo-aryans (ANI2) spread through India, they picked up more of the ANI1+ASI, albeit depending on the region more ANI than ASI, and became ANI2/ANI1/ASI, while Dravidians were ANI1/ASI.

Also from my religious following of Razib Khan’s excellent articles and blog site, I have also inferred that there are whole regions of India that experienced elite language dominance where only the top 1 or 2 upper castes show the Indo-Aryan signature but the majority of population is actually the Dravidian groups that originally lived there (i.e. Gujarat, Maharashtra, Bengal, etc) though they speak an Indo-Aryan language today.

I actually would like to know the story of every different ancestry in India, Austronesian, Tibeto-Burman and the oldest one and most mysterious, the ASI.

Razib thank you so much for posting these articles and for sharing your amazing research, hopefully this will resolve a contentious issue and have people actually focused on the finding the real history and stop gumming up science with their nationalist worldviews (I’m talking to you Thangaraj!)

historumsi
historumsi
6 years ago

Hello, I’m a handle named “historumsi” in the webpage from Historum that you linked to in another comment of yours. Let me comment about some of the current linguistic hypotheses.

1. Mainstream: Dravidian family is isolate, Elamite is isolate, IVC language in the seals not known because the script is not deciphered.

2. Michael Witzel (philologist)’s view of IVC spoken language: Could not have been Dravidian. He called it Kubha-Vipas substrate (which he considers is of a prefixing nature and possibly related to the Munda family of languages) by studying substratum in the earliest parts of Rigveda. He also argued at some point that the IVC seals might not have been showing a written script (which I read shows the language in question seems to be a suffixing type- that’s why the tenuous connection to Dravidian after all, with no linguistic data present at all to analyse) at all, but mainstream thinks the IVC seals to have shown a legitimate script.

3. Franklin Southworth and David McAlpin’s (extremely?) radical and peripheral view: Elamite and Dravidian are related genetically but IVC language (at least the one of the seals) unknown. Going by their chapter in the 2014 book “The Global Prehistory of Human Migrations”, they put Proto-Elamo-Dravidian language at around 4000 BC, Proto-Dravidian (all currently accepted Dravidian languages except Brahui which they place under Elamitic branch) as a result of migration from their Iranian homeland from that 4000 BC – 3000 BC period settling nearby Helmand valley where they split into Proto-North Dravidian and Proto-Peninsular Dravidian. PPD left that valley into Indus Valley as pastoralists and were mind-blown by the culture there and borrowed massively and changed their language extensively, while the PND stayed and expanded in Afghanistan they say (until getting absorbed by Indo-Aryans) except that a minor branch of ND also left into India later than PPD as Proto-Kurukh-Malto speakers. Some groups of PPD did not stay for ever in the Indus Valley (those who stayed probably got assimilated by the Indo-Aryans too) however, and continued towards inner India and managed to enter peninsula proper by roughly 2500 BC while already linguistically differentiated on their way into groups such as Proto-Kolami-Parji, Proto-Telugu, Proto-Gondi-Kui, Proto-Tamil-Tulu and the last three groups combinedly created the Southern Neolithic Complexes with the indigenous millets, after finding that the wheat and barley they picked up in the Indus Valley were failing (memories of these crops were lost too). They were to remain majorly pastoralist in spirit for a long time to come. And a quote from that chapter: “Given the significant impact that the Indus region had on PPD and the probable time periods involved, PPD probably played some role in the Indus Valley civilization. But what role? Administrators, priests or peripheral pastoralists? The hypothesis that the script is Dravidian, while reasonable, remains a hypothesis. Barring major discoveries, this is not likely to change.”

So the point I was trying to make is, most linguistics-based hypotheses at least (including the extremely peripheral hypotheses like the third one, the peripherality of which I think I can never stress enough (at least under the current situation)) do not imagine a common cultural link between the Mature IVC people and the Dravidians (except of course, Asko Parpola’s views of which you might be aware (the fish, star connection particularly)). So the “Dravidian type” ancestry in the Elam-Tamil Nadu belt may be just an indication of an ancient genetic connection with no cultural participation of Dravidian groups in the founding and development of the Indus Valley Civilisation.

Also, in my view the “Dravidian nationalists” are not a particularly productive group as compared to their extreme right wing Hindutvavadi counterparts because of what I perceive as a fundamental difference of worldview between Dravidian civilisation and the Indo-Aryan one (though they were both initially mainly cattle-pastoralists (going by Southworth’s 2007 “Proto-Dravidian Agriculture”)- this wildly superficial similarity is that wildly superficial). While the Indo-Aryan civilisation has steadfastly adhered to its original traditions through all means possible (one of the most powerful manifestations of this attitude has to be the errorless transmission of their sacred texts solely through oral medium for more than a thousand years or so before putting them to writing), the Dravidian civilisation (like most other civilisations I think) attached a far lower attachment to traditions and identities. Take for example, the Ashmounds of the Neolithic in South India, created by burning huge heaps of cow dung to high temperatures. They are thought of by most archaeologists to have been of some kind of social and ritual significance for the Neolithic people. (I’m going here by the hypothesis that the Neolithic Complexes of South India were created by the Late Proto-Dravidian speech community – based on Southworth’s 2007 view in “Proto-Dravidian Agriculture”). But modern Dravidians living in the nearby places think of them as ashes of cremated rakshasas (demons) (not to mention that many Dravidians are not even aware of their existence). Then the religion of megalithism. A form of ancestor worship by erecting huge megaliths in their name. Dravidians in many places think of them as “demon-stones” though many like Tamils and Kannada people retain right memories of them as “vIrakal” or “warrior-stones”. And we know of the extreme impact that Indo-Aryan culture had/ and continues to have on the Dravidian culture. So “Dravidian nationalists” don’t have much now to get nationalised-up anyway. At least not to the scale of the Indo-Aryans. And I somehow think Dravidians are not fundamentally inclined to this particular sort of nationalistic worldview (if the little to no resistance towards westernisation and anglicisation in Dravidians in modern times is any indication of another manifestation of that consistent fluidity and pragmatism).

Prashanth
Prashanth
6 years ago
Reply to  historumsi

For your information, farmers in north Karnataka still grow wheat for their home consumption, on a small scale. though it commercially not viable to sell it in the market.

historumsi
historumsi
6 years ago
Reply to  Prashanth

Prashanth garu,

I was discussing most of what I did under the consideration that the 2800 BC – 1000 BC Southern Neolithic Ashmound Tradition’s earliest phases represented Proto-Dravidian speech community. I mentioned this too, in my original post. And it is clear from the archaeological record that all sorts of wheats and barleys were absent from the earliest phases of the Southern Neolithic. Wheat and barley first appear in Southern Neolithic around 2000 BC via Deccan Chalcolithic cultures of the Northern Deccan who got their wheat and barley from Harappan civilisation and they appear to have gradual and not drastic impact on the overall culture there. It is under this sort of scenario that it becomes necessary to explain why the Dravidians did not begin agriculture with wheat and barley if they were recent migrants from the Indus Valley or Iran or whatever. That’s why, Professor Southworth had to explain it off as a result of winter crops not growing in southern Deccan and all that. Anyway, I clearly invoked Prof. Southworth and David McAlpin when I wrote the “crops would not have grown and knowledge lost” stuff. If you want to entertain the notion that the Dravidian speakers had and also utilised the knowledge of wheat cultivation from the get go, then you can only begin to associate them with perhaps the post 2000 BC of the Southern Neolithic. Which is fine; you can do that, as what other models outshine this particular model? All are just speculations. It’s going to be an eternity of murkiness regarding the origins of Dravidian languages anyway.

I never for a moment thought the good people of North Karnataka or other South Indians in general don’t know how to grow wheat. After all, some of the people of North Karnataka were part of the cultural unit that I myself belong to, in several hundred years of recent history. Anyway, very good to know about this intimate little aspect of the lives of the people of North Karnataka- the connoisseurs of both the classical music systems of India; how great North Karnataka really is! the land of hampi, paTTadakallu, Bhimsen Joshi, Ganayogi Panchakshara Gawai and Ambakka Aai (the paternal grandmother of Sudha Murthy) after all.

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[…] background on the Indian debates, see Razib’s article here and my own (less genetics, more politics) article […]

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[…] Originally Posted by prashanth I posted this in Brown Pundiths Here is a radical alternate perspective: Look at ancient Egypt, it is located on the Nile river delta and a bit of the lower stem of the river. Look at the ancient mesopotamia, it is centred around junction of Eptatretus and Tigris rivers. The first one I would call as distributary civilisation, as it was located close to the delta. Ancient mesopotamia was on the other hand was a tributary river valley civilisation. Indus and the Saraswathi; both had a large number of tributaries and a significant delta with a long stem separating the deltaic region with the tributary region to the north. Two separate sets of civilisation developed, one in the deltaic region (Sind and Gujarat state of India) and the other in the tributary region (Punjab, Haryana). This explains why ancient Indians talked of Pancha Dravida (Karnataka (Kannada Brahmins) Talianga (Telugu Brahmins) Dravida (Brahmins of Tamil Nadu and Kerala) Maharashtraka (Maharashtrian Brahmins) Gurjara (Gujarati Brahmins) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancha-Dravida and Pancha Gowda (Saraswat Gauda Kanyakubja Maithila Utkala), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancha-Gauda. If in prehistory Saraswati was a much larger river than Sindu, with its delta at the rann of kutch, it makes pretty much sence. Both the above civilisations had ANI and ASI in different proportions, one more ASI than the other. Both of them traded and imported ideas from one other, while speaking in languages from different language families (Dravidian and Indo-Aryan). Slowly the Indo Aryan language become more prominent and the delta population also adopted it. Dravidian language got confined to the then dravidian back waters of south India. This theory explains: 1) Gujarat and Maharashtra brahmins being classified among Pancha dravida by the ancient Indians. 2) Grandeur of river Saraswati in the vedas, as the largest of all rivers. 3) Artificial nature of Classical Sanskrit, it was probably a language developed by using some scientific method of classification of sound, grammar etc. to create a unifying language for both Dravidian and Indo- Aryan languages. It also explains presence of Dravidian root words in Sanskrit. 4) Easy explanation for the presence of Brahui language in Baluchistan, as the area is contiguous to the delta area of Sindhu and Saraswati rivers (Pancha Dravida areas). 5) There were two ANI entry points one from eastern Europe and steppes into tributary portion of the rivers. Another one on the coast into Sind and Gujarat, from Iran and the middle east. 6) More migration happened from tributary areas of the rivers in the north to delta areas on the south at a later date. 7) The migration into india from the steppes continued for much longer time to the tributary (northern) region of the river valley. 8) Also note that ancient Egypt had upper and lower Egypt and they were unified later. What is your opinion Razib? How does it gel with genetics? The Indo-Aryan question nearing resolution ? Brown Pundits […]

BK
BK
6 years ago

Razib, i disagree with your quote ‘It is true we are Lords of the Steppe and destined to drive our enemies before us’ R1a- indian version z93 is hardly successful outside India and pockets in Central Asia.

The Eastern European clade also was relatively unsuccessful pushing west or into southern Europe

The true lords of the steppe are r1b, who were neighbours to r1a in the steppes but expanded west rapidly and are now probably the most geographically successful y-DNA haplogroup in modern populations

Stefan
Stefan
6 years ago

Excellent points Razib. I agree with a lot of what you say. You also are not biased like other bloggers like David at Eurogenes, who seem hell bent on white washing everything within a Eurocentric frame.

I think your intuition is sound, Steppe ancestry is definitely overestimated as per my models. The only thing I disagree with is what I consider “Indic” culture , I would saw a lot of the South Indians have significant continuity culturally with the Dravidian Bronze Age . I can say that based on how archaic tribal groups like the Toda and contemporary urban South Indians, there are a lot of similarities in their cultural mores and traditions.

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