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Brown_Pundit_Man
Brown_Pundit_Man
4 years ago

When the Tocharians arrived in NW China, were they the first people to live there? Did they live side-by-side with East Asian presenting people (i.e. with East Asian phenotypes)?

VJP
VJP
4 years ago

So what does it mean that my maternal haplogroup is M and my paternal haplogroup is H1B1? I got these findings from Xcode, India. I was visiting India and decided to use their services. Mysteriously Xcode removed the ancestral test from their website a week after I got my results. And when I called them for clarification about my haplogroup findings they were rather obtuse. Should I get retested? How do I interpret their data? Thanks!

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago

Question – are the terms like ANI, ASI, AASI etc just the temporary terms till S asian genetics become more mature, or are they established terms now?

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago

Question – which tribe/caste in S asia has the highest percentage of AASI ancestry? What percentage is that?

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

Tocharians – Aryans in Tarim Basin

map:
http://www.fallingrain.com/world/CH/32/Serba.html

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2005/apr/19/20050419-101056-2135r/

National Geographic (5 min)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-LXAfmnakg&eurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Emilitaryphotos%2Enet%2Fforums%2Fshowthread%2Ephp%3Ft%3D126729&feature=player_embedded

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarim_mummies

WIKI (Tarim mummies) : “The paternal lines of male remains surveyed nearly all – 11 out of 12, or around 92% – belonged to Y-DNA haplogroup R1a1, which are now most common in West Eurasia. [15] The R1a1 lineage suggests a proximity of this population with groups related to the Andronovo culture, i.e. early Indo-Europeans.[16]

The geographic location of this admixing is unknown, although south Siberia is likely.[13]

Mair claims that “the earliest mummies in the Tarim Basin were exclusively Caucasoid, or Europoid” with east Asian migrants arriving in the eastern portions of the Tarim Basin around 3,000 years ago while the Uyghur peoples arrived around the year 842.”

>> It is obvious that they are genetically the same people as Aryans in Hindustan, i.e. Serbian speaking tribes.

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

In the early 19th century the celebrated German explorer, cosmographer and natural philosopher Alexander von Humboldt postulated from his researches that Central Asia contained a mixed population of doubtful origin. He specifically cited the Massegetae tribe north of the Oxus River as a Mongolic people cohabiting with the Indo-European Sogdians, Bactrians and Indians (See: Fragments de géologie et de climatologie asiatiques (2 vols. 8vo, 1831), and in Asie centrale (3 vols. 8vo, 1843). The Serican physiognomy is described as being of extraordinary size, with blue eyes, red hair, and a rough voice and a body quite unfamiliar with infirmity or contagion.

Pliny (Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, Chap XXIV “Taprobane”) also reports a curious description of the Seres made by an embassy from Taprobane (Greek name for Sri Lanka) to Emperor Claudius, suggesting they may be referring to the ancient Caucasian populations of the Tarim Basin, such as the Tocharians:

“They also informed us that the side of their island (Taprobane) which lies opposite to India is ten thousand stadia in length, and runs in a south-easterly direction–that beyond the Emodian Mountains (Himalayas) they look towards the Serve (Seres), whose acquaintance they had also made in the pursuits of commerce; that the father of Rachias (the ambassador) had frequently visited their country, and that the Seræ always came to meet them on their arrival. These people, they said, exceeded the ordinary human height, had flaxen hair, and blue eyes, and made an uncouth sort of noise by way of talking, having no language of their own for the purpose of communicating their thoughts…”

WIKI: “…Further research is definitely needed in the field of the Tarim Basin populations. Studying the Tocharian population is essential in determining the foundations of the Altaic, Ugrian and Sinatic cultures. Chinese writers always refer to blue eyed giants as their culture bearers and similar references can be found amongst the Turkic populations on the Steppes.”

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

Is the last (wiki) sentence applicable for Hindustan, too?

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago

I think Razib may already be aware of this update –

The Rakhigarhi paper is going to be published today in CELL – 5th Sept.

The Narasimhan et al paper is also coming out in Science – perhaps today itself.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago

The popcorns are ready. Let the battles begin

The great central asian conqueror (Razib) Khan vs ( the son of the soil , our own Bappa Rawal) Jay Rathod . Sounds like a medieval battle in Rajasthan 🙂

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Saurav

Spelling of Jaydeep’s name indicates he is from Gujarat. Idar?

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Well, if you remember, I had already said the same a while back on my blog.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Is the complete article in public domain?

It is obvious that distortion by media has already begun. The footnaote says that the title of the article is – “An ancient Harappan genome lacks ancestry from Steppe pastoralists or Iranian farmers”

OTOH, the article says that the sample did have Iranian plateau ancestry, albeit originating before the advent of farming.

I guess caution must be exercised before drawing any conclusions. Certainly full access to the article is necessary.

Rackham
Rackham
4 years ago

Is there any chance that R1a could have originated in South Asia?

Is Rakhigarhi going to reveal the original homeland of R1a?

Thank you in advance 🙂

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago

” An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers.”

Would that mean our Southern brothers (AASI) entered the subcontinent AFTER the Harappan civilization?

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago

“Would that mean our Southern brothers (AASI) entered the subcontinent AFTER the Harappan civilization?”
.

Do you mean modern south indians (i.e. dravidian speakers)?

Because AASI has always been present in India. They were part of the original out of africa migration of modern humans.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

Yeah made a mistake on AASI.

I was referring to modern south Indians only. Isnt the modern south indians a mix of Iranian farmers and AASI? If the Iranians entered after Harrapan, and the Iranian farmer quotient in S-Indian DNA is apropos to the steppe quotient of modern day N-Indian, that would mean both outside groups (steppe and Iranian farmer) entered around the same time.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

This new technique of extracting DNA from the petrous bone, can it not be used in stone age skeletons previously thought unsalvageable?

Those skeletons are bound to be free of iranian ancestry.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

The oldest human skeletons found in South Asia are from Sri Lanka:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balangoda_Man

Skeletal Anthropologists have concluded a biological continuum to the indigenous Veddas (who now in the modern era are heavily mixed with west Eurasian dna).

Has any of the major players in ancient DNA like the Reich lab considered working on these skeletons?

They are likely candidates for pure AASI DNA.

sbarrkum
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

Karan
Thanks, did not know oldest human skeletons found in South Asia are from Sri Lanka.

There is a mismatch between wiki and the paper it references

wiki
The Vedda people’s mitochondrial sequences were found to be more related to the Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils than to the Indian Tamils.[16]

paper
Through a comparison with the mtDNA HVS-1 and part of HVS-2 of Indian database, both Tamils and Sinhalese clusters were affiliated with Indian subcontinent populations than Vedda people who are believed to be the native population of the island of Sri Lanka.

https://www.nature.com/articles/jhg2013112

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  sbarrkum

sbarrkum

Something for your eyes

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00856401.2019.1626127

Lankapura: The Legacy of the Ramayana in Sri Lanka

sbarrkum
4 years ago
Reply to  sbarrkum

Saurav

Thank You.
Yes not much consciousness of Ravana or Ramayana in SL. The stories are known but thats about it. Changing, there is a Ravana Balaya (Force) that right wing Sinhala Nationalist (like RSS?).

The Old historical (Mahavamsa) texts dont mention Ravana. The Rajavaliya does in 3 places. However it seems to be written post 15th century when South Indian Hindu influence was the much.

Rajavaliya (Introduction)
There is no internal evidence to fix the date or authorship of this work. The fact that in some places the compiler writes as a Buddhist, whilst elsewhere he uses phraseology natural to a Christian, added to a marked diversity of style,
warrants the inference that it is the compilation of more than one hand.
That the authors possessed little grammatical knowledge of Sinhalese is patent from numerous solecisms and orthographical errors calculated to reflect upon their scholarship. These defects make the meaning of certain passages obscure and doubtful, and render the settlement of the text as a whole extremely difficult, and of parts well nigh impossible.

pg 16
At that time this beautiful island of Lanka was inhabited only by demons, evil spirits, and fiends ; there was no human habitation. After the war of Ravana, and before the attainment of Buddhahood by our Buddha, the teacher of the three worlds, Lanka had been the abode of demons for the space of 1,844 years.

pg 22
In former times there was no sea between Tiittukudi and Lanka ; but there stood the city of Ravana, Be it known that by his wickedness, his fortress, 25 palaces, and 400,000 streets, were all overwhelmed by the sea. The ferry at which the boar landed on this Lapka of Havana, after swimming through that strait of the sea, was called Uratota.

pg 27
In the Dvapara age of the world, on account of the wickedness of Ravana, his fortress, 25 palaces, and 400,000 streets, situate between Mannar and Tuttukudiya, were submerged by the sea. At this time, on account of the wickedness of Kelanitissa, 100,000 seaport towns, 970 fishers villages, and 470 villages of pearl-fishers, making altogether eleventwelfths of Laigika, were submerged by the great sea. Manner escaped the destruction ; of sea-port towns, Katupiti Madampe escaped.
The Old historical (Mahavamsa) texts dont mention Ravana. The Rajavaliya does in 3 places. However it seems to be written post 15th century when South Indian Hindu influence was the much.

ArainGang
ArainGang
4 years ago

Very pleased to see this paper being discussed! I thought only nerds were into this stuff.

Its actually pretty interesting that a key takeaway from this paper has been known for years in the informal genetics community. Specifically, that the Iranian component in the Indus Valley Civilization is not quite the same as the Iranian Farmer from Neolithic Iran. The latter has Caucasus admixture, the former does not.

The Harapan Ancestry Project actually unwittingly revealed this, and its followers had been kicking this theory around on forums. There are ethnic groups in India with large Baloch-component but no Caucasus. Which means they can’t have been the product of Neolithic Iranian Farmers, as these samples while high in Baloch, are fairly enriched in Caucasus as well.

Meaning there is likely a more “pure” Iranian farmer with all Baloch and no Caucasus component, that settled in the Indus valley and mixed with the AASI. Or maybe our understanding of Iranian Farmer breadth and genetics isn’t complete. Very cool stuff either way.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago
Reply to  ArainGang

I had always suspected that there were multiple waves of proto-iranian migration into India.

The elamo-dravidian farmer migration was probably the last before the arrival of the Aryans.

Linguistics have confirmed that elamite, brahui and proto-dravidian are part of the same language family (zagrossian).

Also the J2 y haplotype i think is associated with the Zagrossian.

But haplotype L-M20 may be evidence of an older proto-iranian influx into india before the Dravidian J2.

ben-canaan
ben-canaan
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

Never thought about it that way, but it’s intuitive. H could have a similar origin story to L, which would be even more disorienting…

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

:

Linguistics have confirmed that elamite, brahui and proto-dravidian are part of the same language family (zagrossian).

Really? This is news to me. Are you just picking one guy’s opinion? My understanding was that there was a consensus against linking elamite and dravidian in the linguistics field.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

Consensus is most definitely not against the Proto-Zagrossian language family. If anything it is undecided.

I have read many of the papers and I am personally convinced.

The recent DNA studies confirming the Iranian admixture also support the hypothesis.

Brahui shares features with Proto-Dravidian that are absent in Elamite, but also shares features with Elamite that are absent in Proto-Dravidian.

Please read around the topic and the actual papers:

https://www.quora.com/What-are-the-recent-findings-and-sound-hypotheses-about-the-Elamite-language/answer/Thomas-Wier

https://www.quora.com/Why-is-Brahui-a-Dravidian-language-spoken-in-Pakistan

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/81064006.pdf

http://conf.ling.cornell.edu/riceandlanguage/abstracts/Southworth_abstract.pdf

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TyJlBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA237&lpg=PA237&dq=proto+zagrosian&source=bl&ots=dpYj8lnTzm&sig=ACfU3U0uG5FJHGeubSTQwROcf1nMTjPcsw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiF9Iad3brkAhUNHcAKHSFyALEQ6AEwB3oECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=proto%20zagrosian&f=false

https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7817/jameroriesoci.135.3.551?&

https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/BLS/article/view/2113/1885

In the last link check out the section on personal pronouns. See how Brahui is in between Proto-Dravidian and Elamite.

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

Thanks. To be clear, I was referring to the putative link between Elamite and Dravidian. I know Brahui is considered part of the Dravidian family. I did not know of the shared words between Brahui and Elamite; need to understand that better (could it be because of proximity rather than shared descent?)

INDTHINGS
INDTHINGS
4 years ago

A glimpse of how many in India reacted to the earlier leaks of these papers shows the level of scientific illiteracy we are dealing with.

Some of the most widely shared pieces were about how such studies “junk the Aryan Invasion theory”, because no Steppe-DNA was found in the IVC samples. When you tried to explain to them modern Indians have Aryan-DNA, so it had to come from somewhere, they say its coincidence that Indians naturally mutated the same genes seen in Eurasia.

thewarlock
thewarlock
4 years ago
Reply to  INDTHINGS

These people are so goofy. I think this paper just added nuance to one of the three major components of S Asian ancestry, the neolithic Iranic component. That component also probably makes up the plurality and probably, when averaging all groups together, the majority of S Asian DNA. The big picture doesn’t change for people that were accepting of the idea of all of the evidence pointing towards and in support of the Aryan migration. I think this paper has more consequence in the context of trying to understand the origins of farming and Dravidian languages in S Asia.
But lettuce b cereal. These topics don’t peak the interest of the majority of those interested in S Asian genetics, especially lay people. The magic Sky Father R1a1 is all anyone cares about. The keys to the Vedic Kingdom are essential. The position of utmost leadership of all things Indian Civilization has apparently offered to the world. It is where genetics meets civilizational pride and mythology. This stuff, while cool, hasn’t really changed the paradigm too much regarding that. I don’t think it will change all that much in the future anyway. The evidence has frankly trended towards building more and more in the same direction. Thins are trending towards verification rather than repudiation.

Shafiq
Shafiq
4 years ago
Reply to  INDTHINGS

Hey guy, leave talks about science literacy. The overall Indian/Hindu reaction to genetic corroboration of Aryan Migration Theory is ten times more sober and constructive than Muslim reactions to scientific historical debunking of the claims of Islam in Quran, Hadith and et cetra. At least Hundu nationalists are trying to discredit genetic findings with information that may be dubious but still belong to empirical realm. Muslims are still trying to prove existence of Djins! Just imagine the types of articles about AIT written in Indian mainsteam press and hypothetically imagine what would be fate of people writing articles debunking Quranic science in Pakistan.Considering the neighborhood, the level of the AIT debate has been highly commendable.

Soma
Soma
4 years ago

So Razib, what is the situation with YDNA R2? Did it arrive with the pre farming >10,000 migrants before lineage divergence giving rise to the hunter gatherer, herder, and farming people in the Iranian Plateau.

A south sketch:
1) AASI arrives along the East Eurasian cline during the Pleistocene.
2) Iran related ancestry >10,000 years arrived with migrants before the lineage diverged into Hunter gatherer, Herder, or Farming populations.

This ancestry lacked the anatolian farmer ancestry found in Western Iranian Farmers (Hajji Firuz), and Eastern Iranian Farmers (Tepe Hissar). Although South Asians carry little Anatolian ancestry but from post IVS steppe population (A lot of Steppe, little Anatolian farmer + WHG; due to back flow; Sintashta Culture).

They looked at samples at IVC outposts (IVC Cline; Shahr -i-Sokhta, and Gonur; copper age). They found the samples heavily admixed with ‘Iranian related ancestry that lacked or had little Anatolian farmer and Eastern European HG ancestry unlike the Bronze age Iran/Turan samples; the IVC cline also had significant minority AASI type ancestry. Thus, the IVC seems best fit for individuals at IVC, perhaps high Iran related ancestry, little AASI; but could a heterogenous mix.

Rise of agriculture in IVC local.

3) Steppe ancestry arrived after around 2000 BCE, absent in the Rakhigarhi samples.

Razib, haplogroups like R2 – did they arrive with the Iranian (>10,000) people?

thewarlock
thewarlock
4 years ago

I think modern day Patels are best proxy for the original IVC people. They have some of the highest iranic neolithic component and AASI, yet, on average, very little Steppe. They would be more AASI shifted relative to the average IVC resident, based on the few samples we have at least. But they seem to be the best current day representatives. They also reside in modern territory that was once part of the IVC.

thewarlock
thewarlock
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

But don’t baloch have Caucus hunter gatherer component they lack, whereas some S Asian groups don’t lack that component and are principally the same components that make them up, albeit with a greater S Asian hunter gatherer bent? Or is the iranic neolithic so prominent in them that the Baloch would still be closer?

Nathan
Nathan
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Baloch look relatively fair compared to the average North Indian , Pakistani from Sindh and Punjab.

Doesn’t the Rig Veda talk about battling dark skinned short snub nosed people?

In Western depictions of IVC people, they are generally portrayed as dark skinned. A book I have portrays them as looking like lower caste North Indians or South Indians.

The IVC was a very large civilization with high population density, and majority of South Asia is relatively dark skinned, so isn’t it very likely that IVC was made of dark skinned people?

It is often being said that IVC was diverse. I don’t doubt this but owing to the nature of the civilization and similarities between IVC cities, there had to be a dominant culture there. IVC is a peculiar civilization compared to other ancient civilizations. Sumer and Egypt both had grand structures indicating a society that spend most of its resources in catering to elite wants, while IVC cared more about building to cater to the many and lacks the kind of grand buildings of Sumer and Egypt. IVC is known for its town planning and bathroom facilities for most house. What are the odds that very different cultures all agreed to build this peculiar kind of Civilization , such as town planning , bathrooms and comfortable abodes for the many instead of a few grand elite structures?

Rackam
Rackam
4 years ago

So Indus Valley Civilisation populated by largely indigenous group of Y DNA haplogroup U2. They have little in common with Iranian farmers (Y DNA haplogroup H) and Steppe pastoralists (Y DNA haplogroup R1a). Is this a good summary?

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago

Razib

Just wanted to know, is there is as much interest (and work) being done on genetics in other parts of the world. Is the interest in the subcontinent due to lack of clarity, while in other parts of the world everything is more or less settled. Or is it perhaps we brown people don’t know much and each region has its own AIT-OIT dynamics and all.

Rackam
Rackam
4 years ago

Some Indians have unnecessarily politicised what should have been a purely scientific affair. This is a sad state of affairs for Indians. Future generations will blame those people who have made a cottage industry out of “disproving AIT”.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  Rackam

I think perhaps what you and Razib are referring to as political could be just old school Indian bureaucracy. I remember when the first tentative genetics results came out , even folks (like romila thapar) from left , liberal were also skeptical of results of such heavy Aryan inward migration. Much could be just professional rivalry where genetics seem to be displacing linguists and archaeology at the fore front of Indus-Harrapan research.

The right (OIT) and all, for the longest time, didn’t hold much power or influence in the Govt to really impede research on political grounds. The cottage inudstry you are talking about is like a super sub set of the right which is active on the net. On ground, these findings doesn’t hamper the right wing in any way for them to really push back.

Nathan
Nathan
4 years ago
Reply to  Rackam

@Rackam

Hindutva ideologues, composed mostly of North Indian upper castes and Brahmins politicized the discourse surrounding IVC, by trying to claim it as Aryan. S.Indians are just responding to this Aryancentric revisionism. Modi , even though coming from a lower caste, is just the point man.

Hindutva is an upper caste / Brahmin attempt to claim Aryan supremacy. They are trying to Aryanize IVC. This is similar to the attempts by some White Supremacists to claim the Solutrean Hypothesis proves Whites are the indigenous people of the Americas or like claiming Ancient Egypt was built by Whites.

For the most part, when Western historians first started writing about the Indian Sub-Continent, and saw the linguistic connections to Europeans, they ascribed the glory of Indian civilization to Aryans. They credited Indo-Europeans as bringers of civilization and the non-Aryans as inferiors. When IVC was discovered they had to revise this line of thinking, admitting that pre-Aryan South Asians were already civilized, far more so than Aryans. Now we have Indians who identify with Aryan heritage emulating those old Eurocentric historians, trying to whitewash Ancient India and credit Civilization to Aryans.

Hindutva ‘historian’ Rajaram and BJP politician Subramanian Swamy refuse to accept that IVC was not Aryan. Rajaram is infamous for his fraudulent attempt at trying to prove horses existed in IVC.

Subramanian Swamy recently tweeted the headline from an article that paints David Reich as “Harvard’s 3rd Reich”.

Here is the tweet from Swamy attacking David Reich
https://twitter.com/swamy39/status/990370678275796992?lang=en

Here is the article Swamy was referencing.
https://www.pgurus.com/there-are-lies-damned-lies-and-harvards-third-reich-and-cos-statistics/

Surprise surprise that both Rajaram and Swamy are Brahmins.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago

All the samples in the IVC cline in the Cell paper are overwhelmingly West Eurasian in ancestry. Is there any reason why the first Rakhigarhi male sample (who was akin to the Irula tribe) not included?

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

>>> I think that was too much expectations from this paper but we (i.e. I) could not see anything what we did not know. It is the normal considering that the paper only tried to reconstruct one sequence of Brownian movement. I believe that genetic experiments were conducted professionally but isolated from other elements could not give us anything new. There was, however, an attempt to put this in a context of languages but it was pretty unconvincing.

The main objection is the continuation of using meaningless taxonomy which needs to be replaced: steppe, indo-european, indo-iranian, west euroasia, balto-slavic (???), etc. Let see:

PAPER: “The mature Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), also known as the Harappan Civilization, was spread over northwestern South Asia from 2600 to 1900 BCE and was one of the first large-scale urban societies of the ancient world, characterized by systematic town planning, elaborate drainage systems, granaries, and standardization of weights and measures. The inhabitants of the IVC were cosmopolitan, with multiple cultural groups living together in large regional urban centers…”

>>> I mentioned before that any paper without referring to Lepenski Vir (Iron Gates) and Vinča is useless. Otherwise, the authors should already know that such and more technologically developed settlements existed several thousands of years before those mentioned in the paper.

PAPER: “However, a natural route for Indo-European languages to have spread into South Asia is from Eastern Europe via Central Asia in the first half of the 2nd millennium BCE, a chain of transmission that did occur as has been documented in detail with ancient DNA. The fact that the Steppe pastoralist ancestry in South Asia matches that in Bronze Age Eastern Europe (but not Western Europe [de Barros Damgaard et al., 2018; Narasimhan et al., 2019]) provides additional evidence for this theory, as it elegantly explains the shared distinctive features of Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian languages (Ringe et al., 2002).”

>>> This is a good conclusion although known from before. The authors came close, but they were afraid to explicitly state the facts (why mentioned western EU??). Maybe because of this we are for 200 years in a neverending quest for elusive ‘Indo-European’ people and their origins. It would be also good to see one ‘elegantly’ mentioned example.

Instead, a simple logic with known facts can be used:
1) Aryans existed.
2) Aryans were R1A.
3) Slavics were/are R1A
4) The term ‘Slavics’ was coined in the 7.c.AC.
5) Previous term for “Slavics” (i.e. before 7.c.AC) was – Serbs
6) Ergo – Aryans were Serbs.

Let see which above point is incorrect, doubtful, suspicious, unclear, whatever, to discuss it and replace with better and truthful.

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

Razib,

There was a similar question above… You have probably read the Nature’s paper: ‘The genomic history of south-eastern Europe’ (2018) by David Reich (+121). There is one excerpt:

“Although this study has clarified the genomic history of the region from the Mesolithic to the Bronze Age, the processes that connected these populations to ones living today remain largely unknown. An important priority for future research should be to sample populations from the Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman and Medieval periods and to compare them to present-day populations to understand how these transitions occurred.”

It seems to me that the previous is an empty political charade to avoid making a clear scientific statement. But, anyway, I think that the experiment itself was good (finally some realised that Lepenski Vir and Vinca need to be researched). Genetic researches over there actually just started.

My question is – has the experiment confirmed that in Lepenski Vir (Iron Gates) 6000BC were present I2 and R1A (he says R1 but he is not explicit on R1A)? Thanks.

SDutta
SDutta
4 years ago

Why is Vasant Shinde being quoted saying such strange things and contradicting his own paper in a mainstream newspaper like The Economic Times?

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/rakhigarhi-dna-study-questions-aryan-invasion-theory-claims-author/articleshow/71001985.cms

vsds
vsds
4 years ago

Hello Razib !

Vageesh’s paper mentions how Steppe admixture with Indus to form ANI was predominantly due to Steppe females as they found pretty low R1a in Iron age Swat Valley samples. But in modern Indian populations, Steppe admixture is male driven. What gives ?

vsds
vsds
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Thank you. Also, you might have followed the story of the bronze age burials that have been discovered in Sanauli in Uttar Pradesh a few months ago by the Archeological Society of India. It includes weapons, chariots, etc and had a material culture that was distinct from the IVC. So if this indicates that there was a bronze age civilization on the Gangetic plains contemporary to the IVC, do you think they were also of a similar genetic makeup as the IVC ? That is to say that they that they were a mix of Neolithic Iran+AHG ? Or were they enriched for AHG perhaps ?

Deep Bhatnagar
Deep Bhatnagar
4 years ago

What is the possibility that Brahmins were like say ambassadors aka elite representatives or elites themselves which might have allowed the elites of other societies living or coming in their proximities resulting in the genetic exachange we observe ? We all can observe that elites with differences get along while the majority of the society do not. Not sure if there is any such possibility with regards to Bhumihars.

Even in tribal societies leaders used to exchange their daughters or get them married to opposite faction leaders to forge alliances. Is there any possibility of this happening leading to the kind of genetic results of Brahmins link to steppe people ?

R1adude
R1adude
4 years ago

When we have a look at say brahmin_UP ancestral data, and for e.g. if it shows 30% steppe ancestry, how much of that can we attribute only to the migrations into subcontinent around 1500BC, and how much can we attribute to groups like Shakas and Huns settling later in the subcontinent?

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

According to some interpretations, it seems that in ancient times and later Indians could go anywhere in the world – Mauritania, China, Iran, Assyria, Philippines, Bali, Kenya, Mauritius, South Africa, Fiji…sometimes as Gypsies to Europe, sometimes even on elephants but no one could come to India…

Razib, can I expect your answer on my question?

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago

Razib-bait:

https://twitter.com/sanjeevsanyal/status/1169882353709137921

(This guy is pretty influential, writes history books with a contrarian take.)

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

Thanks for the link and the opportunity to see the state of mind of one segment (major? minor?) of the Indian society. Now, I understand the frustration of the self-styled ‘Brown_Pundit_Man’, an obscure, anonymous personality who already two times tried forcefully to shout my mouth. Until now, I was certain that ‘taqiyya’ was the lowest point on the ethical scale and I was always surprised that neither so-called liberal Muslims, nor (muslim) atheists never attempted to denounce it as an etalon of primitivity. I assumed this as a mirror of the movement and it directed my general opinion toward this chest-beating crusade. But now, faced with such BPM primitivity and frustration I must recalibrate my value scale. It is very disappointing that such anti-intellectual backstabbing came from the side I was the least prepared to expect.

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago

Shinde, the leading author of the paper says:
The paper indicates that there was no Aryan invasion and no Aryan migration and that all the developments right from the hunting-gathering stage to modern times in South Asia were done by indigenous people“.

According to https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/rakhigarhi-dna-study-questions-aryan-invasion-theory-claims-author/articleshow/71001985.cms?from=mdr&utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

What the hell is going on?

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

Apologies, I see this link has been posted above already. Feel free to delete this comment.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

I think I know what exactly is going on here. That IVC was completely indigenous is proven unquestionably by the paper already. In fact the paper strengthen Hindu nationalists’ position quite a lot by asserting that farming rose indigenously in IVC. I think now they are aiming to prove that Sanskrit and its descendant IA languages are indigenous too. If they can somehow prove that IA languages did not arrive with the steppe blood, then the steppe ancestry of modern Indians ceases to be a factor of any significance. They can ascribe this component to any of the trickling migration from the steppes any time from post IVC to Hunnic invasions times. After all as long as the steppe component did not have any cultural impact it does not matter in the overall development of Hindu culture.

To a certain extent they do have a point. The proponents of AIT/AMT are focusing too much on genetics to prove their arguments. Genes don’t carry the markers of language. This debate should primarily be settled via linguistics. Archaeology and genetics can only be used as corroborative sciences to settle this debate.

Anyway, it will be interesting to see how the debates evolves in the future. Exciting times ahead.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

“The proponents of AIT/AMT are focusing too much”

They are trying to win a cultural battle through genetics. Good luck with that.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

Just noted that the it is the same journalist (Anubhuti Vishnoi) who junked AIT about a year ago too.

She is really in a hurry to junk AIT.

Milan Todorovic
Milan Todorovic
4 years ago

The article in India Times: there is a logical error in making conclusions. The experiment could prove the ‘presence’ of something but not the ‘absence’ of something. Such ‘methodology’ was often used by ancient sophists – have you lost the horns? No! It means you have horns!

It seems that it is a favourite approach by the main OIT proponents. They stated, for e.g., that an ancient, indigenous copper chariot was found in SA, what is a proof that Aryans did not exist (because the original argument was that they came on chariots).
Also, some discovered remains of an ancient horse had (let say) 34 ribs but Euro horses had (let say) 36 ribs, what is another proof that they did not come (because of the original argument that they came on horses). They ignore that it was possible both, that Aryans came on chariots and horses but some other chariots and horses already existed in SA.

Rackam
Rackam
4 years ago

Unfortunate to see that a scientist is spewing political nonsense. Vasant Shinde is trying to gain political favour with such statements

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago
Reply to  Rackam

Reich and his team are not saints. So stop this BS !

Shinde has every right to say what he makes of the data. He is also looking at it from the archaeological perspective, about which he know more than any of you idiots. He is the principal excavator of Rakhigarhi !

Don’t try to malign all and sundry because they do not agree with the dominant steppe migration narrative.

Karan
Karan
4 years ago
Reply to  Rackam

Yes Vasant Shinde is an absolute joke. His statements of denial and obfuscation regarding the Aryan migrations into India are pathetic. He is such a lax scholar that he even wrote a paper on fake Indus Valley script artefacts:

https://www.ancient-asia-journal.com/articles/10.5334/aa.12317/

Unfortunately, this is the level of scientific rigour among these archaeologists.

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago
Reply to  Karan

You are. Nincompoop idiot. A good for nothing ignoramus.

Vasant Shinde is a seasoned archaeologist who has written several books on the Harappan civilization and has been instrumental in excavating several Harappan sites in Gujarat & Haryana. If you cannot treat your own scholars with respect because you do not like what they say, it is a reflection of what you are. So if you still want to spew venom get the hell out of here.

If you want to criticise some scholar do so with some class and decency. Don’t act like a foul-mouthed donkey.

It is unanimously accepted among all archaelogists, Indian or foreign, who have worked on the Harappan sites that there is no evidence of steppe migration into South Asia. This is even acknowledged in the South Central Asian paper if you bothered to read it. Archaeologists like Cameroon Petrie or Jonathan Mark Kenoyet, are also not very fond of these steppe migration narratives. What makes them less credible than the geneticists ? And what is your qualification to pass judgement on them ?

Karan
Karan
4 years ago

Shinde is guilty of repeatedly distorting the fact that the steppes people (the original Arya) migrated into India prior to the Vedic period.

It is his backers who are responsible for the holding back of the Rakhigarhi results for over a year.

They are anti science and holding back research into our history.

They are jokes.

Hoju
Hoju
4 years ago
Reply to  Rackam

“Unfortunate to see that a scientist is spewing political nonsense. Vasant Shinde is trying to gain political favour with such statements”

This is the reality of Maudi India. The media and most agencies have already been controlled; now the scientists, too.

SDutta
SDutta
4 years ago

I am frankly disgusted by the way a certain section of the Indian media has handled this, some deliberately, and some unwittingly duped. They are just waiting for this to play out until the moon landing just a few hours away to engage in another bout of hyper-nationalism, and a justifiably more deserving one. By then, this paper will be conveniently memory-holed.

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago

Let me just for everyone’s benefit what Vasant Shinde’s take on this subject is.

As per him, all the characteristics of Indian civilization including that of the Vedic period can be shown to be derived from Harappan culture as found at sites like Rakhigarhi. So as per his excavation in this region, the Vedic people are the same as the Harappans or perhaps derived from them.

There is cultural continuity between Harappans and later historic Indians without any sign of an intrusive culture in the intervening period. Therefore, archaeologically the Vedic or Indo-Aryan culture can be derived from the Harappan culture.

Therefore as per Shinde, the Harappans were Vedic or ancestors of Vedic, Since they do not have steppe ancestry at Rakhigarhi, he interprets it to mean that the people who formed the Vedic Indo-Aryan culture had no steppe ancestry.

Later on, he acknowledges that there was cultural and genetic exchange with neighbouring regions but this is not evidence enough to posit an Indo-Aryan migration.

I hope this clears it and people from now on would stop attacking him & others.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago

So let me summarize the current state of debate. I think it all hinges on a single question. Does steppe blood equal to IA languages? .

For us Indians of course this question is far more important that the question whether P equals NP.

With all due respect, I think Shinde is jumping the gun when he claims that no steppe blood in IVC equals no AIT/AMT. The honest answer will be – we don’t know.

To prove their position the indigenous Aryans camp will have to prove, either on linguistic grounds or archaeological grounds, that IVC gave birth to IA languages and vedic culture. It is still an open question. Not settled one way or other.

Shafiq R
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

If there is cultural continuity from Harappan to Vedic era then shouldn’t Harappan scripts would be clearly decipherable? Is there any trace of Vedic language in Harappan sites?

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

“Does steppe blood equal to IA languages? .

For us Indians of course this question is far more important that the question whether P equals NP”

Blood too, is very important, for the right wing. Actually its the language which can be given a pass.

It has always been so.

Francesco Brighenti
Francesco Brighenti
4 years ago

>> Let me just for everyone’s benefit what Vasant Shinde’s take on this subject is. As per him, all the characteristics of Indian civilization including that of the Vedic period can be shown to be derived from Harappan culture as found at sites like Rakhigarhi. So as per his excavation in this region, the Vedic people are the same as the Harappans or perhaps derived from them.

Yes, Dr. Shinde seems to believe that the inhabitants of Rakhigarhi – evidently those who lived in the final phase of that site – were “early Vedic” people who would have genetically descended, with no solution of continuity, from the Mature Harappan population of the city. Here are some statements attributed to him by a journalist of the Economic Times in June, 2018:

http://tinyurl.com/yapb7eb5
“According to Shinde’s findings, the manner of burial [at Rakhigarhi] is quite similar to the early Vedic period. […] [He notes] that some burial rituals observed in the Rakhigarhi necropolis prevail even now in some communities, showing a remarkable continuity over thousands of years.”

How can Shinde know some of the burials he excavated in Rakhigarhi were “similar to [those of] the early Vedic period”? What burials excavated in that area – as well as in any other area of NW South Asia – are assigned to the early Vedic period? Note that Shinde *never ever* mentions any similarities between Mature Harappan Rakhigarhi burials and “early Vedic” burials in the peer-reviewed paper on the Rakhigarhi cemetery he published in PLOS One (as the main author) back in 2018:

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0192299

On what archaeological ground can Shinde claim some of the Rakhigarhi burials were similar to “early Vedic” ones (whatever that means from an archaeological standpoint)?

>> There is cultural continuity between Harappans and later historic Indians without any sign of an intrusive culture in the intervening period. Therefore, archaeologically the Vedic or Indo-Aryan culture can be derived from the Harappan culture.

What are – according to Shinde, not to you – the archaeological remains of the Vedic people, and how can such supposed remains, if any, be demonstrably shown to derive from the material culture of the Indus civilization? If you have pottery in mind, remember that the Vedic Aryans are known, from their own texts, to employ the services of the local populations for pottery. Only sacred vessels were made by brahmins in the most archaic fashion, without the use of the potter’s wheel. Vessels used for secular purposes were made by local potters who lived in symbiosis with the semi-nomadic Vedic Aryans in their treks. Thus, archaeology is of no help here.

>> Therefore as per Shinde, the Harappans were Vedic or ancestors of Vedic. Since they do not have steppe ancestry at Rakhigarhi, he interprets it to mean that the people who formed the Vedic Indo-Aryan culture had no steppe ancestry.

Ah, no? So what about the Late Bronze Age Swat aDNA samples discussed in Narasimhan et al. 2019 paper? Swat (> Later on, he acknowledges that there was cultural and genetic exchange with neighbouring regions but this is not evidence enough to posit an Indo-Aryan migration.

When and where did this “later” – by which term you certainly designate the post-Vedic period – genetic exchange take place? Is Shinde, in your opinion, here referring to the possible intermarrying of Parasikas (Persians), Yavanas (Indo-Greeks), Sakas (Indo-Scythians), Pahlavas (Indo-Parthians), and Hunas (Hepthalites), in this chronological order, with Hindu caste populations? Do you think Shinde identifies these historical foreign, barbarian, “mlechchha” peoples as the *first* carriers of Steppe ancestry into South Asia at ca. 500 BCE – 500 CE? Lol! They could not even intermarry with brahmins, who regarded them as “degraded” kshatriyas to be equated – according to the Manu-smriti (X.43-44) as well as some doctrinal sections of the Mahabharata – to the caste rank of the shudras. This idea is in plain conflict with hard genetic data, Steppe ancestry being, conversely, very high in modern brahmin groups as per Narasimhan et al. 2019 paper. Therefore, the intruduction of Steppe ancestry into South Asia cannot have had the Persians, Indo-Greeks, Indo-Scythians, Indo-Parthians, and Hephthalites as its earliest vectors.

Francesco Brighenti
Francesco Brighenti
4 years ago

A line was missing from my post, here it is:

Swat (from Rigvedic Skt. su-vastu ‘good ground’) is an area known in the RV as Indo-Aryan territory.

td
td
4 years ago

“They could not even intermarry with brahmins, who regarded them as “degraded” kshatriyas to be equated – according to the Manu-smriti (X.43-44) as well as some doctrinal sections of the Mahabharata – to the caste rank of the shudras” —-> Imo, using some verses from MS to claim certain groups *could not marry certain groups* is not a good idea . MS also prohibits sapinda marriage(close cousin marriage from sides) but that didn’t stop some brahmins from karnataka in indulging in cross-cousin marriages. Dharmshastras are not strict law codes to be followed (certainly not Kulluka Bhat’s commentary on MS )

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Yes I know it. But that is the version of Harvard and Shinde does not really agree with it. The Rakhigarhi paper at any rate does not go into proving how steppe DNA got into South Asia.

Ukumar
Ukumar
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

To be fair with Shinde, above paragraph doesn’t talk about direction of influence so still consistent with his view. This may be concession to him as lead author

SDutta
SDutta
4 years ago

Vasant Shinde: “[Aloud] There was no Aryan invasion… [cough cough/mumble/whisper] …when this Indus Valley woman was alive.”
Indian media: “There was no Aryan invasion!”

Shafiq R
4 years ago
Reply to  SDutta

@SDutta, you really made my Day with that comment. It reminds me of the famous Judisthir episode in Mahabharata where he said to Dronacharya, ‘Ashwathama Hatha, ithi gaja’. Aswathama is dead, (whisper) its an elephant.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Shafiq R

” It reminds me of the famous Judisthir episode in Mahabharata where he said to Dronacharya, ‘Ashwathama Hatha, ithi gaja’. ”

If all subcontinental muslims could quote from hindu epics so effortlessly, hindu right wouldn’t have any need to invent tortuous theories like OIT. 🙂 Afterall, it is subcontinental muslims’ repudiation of their Hindu past that led to these non-issues turning into burning debates.

Shafiq R
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

@Scorpion Eater, whichever people live in Egypt, it will always be known as the Land of the Pharoes, the land of Egyptian civilization. Egyptians are proud of that great heritage regardless of faith. From the start of the Iron age to until recently, India has been the most populated area of the world with one thrid of humanity and place of a great and continuous civilization. Everybody born in this region should be aware of this heritage and feel no hesitation in making this a big part of own identity.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago

If only Mr Shinde would ever know how his fans(and haters) collide on some obscure blog. ???

Jaydeepsinh Rathod
4 years ago
Reply to  Saurav

Tbh, I am not his fan.

But he is a reasonably accomplished Indian archaeologist. Shouldn’t his countrymen atleast address him with a measure of respect ? This is the problem with us Indians. We like to pull down those of our own with great relish while slavishly taking the foreigner’s word as gospel. I really have a great problem with that.

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago


Vasant Shinde: “[Aloud] There was no Aryan invasion… [cough cough/mumble/whisper] …when this Indus Valley woman was alive.”

Is there an audio/video of his conference available? can you please post the link.

Saurav
Saurav
4 years ago
Reply to  Razib Khan

Wait, they are doing press conferences now? ??

At 2:40, he said “one of topmost, one of the “TOPPEST” genetic scientist ” Modiji be proud. I dead.??

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Saurav

Give him a break. India is now a Hindu rashtra for all intents and purposes. Do you want him to loose his job by loose talk?

Deep Bhatnagar
Deep Bhatnagar
4 years ago
Reply to  Scorpion Eater

lol

Numinous
Numinous
4 years ago

Jaydeep,

Everyone knows that belief in AIT is mainly inspired by the fact that the timeline of genetic inflow into the Indian subcontinent matches the expected timeline of IA split from other IE languages. (Before genetics, one could plausibly consider the steppe theory to be speculation.) So Shinde is being very disingenuous (and possibly a bit dishonest) by not mentioning language at all in his ET interview. He sticks to arguments about material culture being the marker of “Aryans” when the entire academic world considers the IE languages to be the primary marker.

Also, hasn’t the entire narrative up to now been that presence of steppe DNA in IVC sites will be slam dunk proof of OIT? And this paper comes up which shows there was no steppe DNA (OK, it’s just one sample) and apparently that still proves the OIT (or disproves the AIT.) So both evidence and the lack of it are supposed to debunk AIT now?

Shafiq R
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

That’s the funniest thing. If Step markers were found in Rakhigiri then it would have been a triumphant vindication of Out of India theory. It has not been found so it is now a triumphant demolition of Aryan Invasion Theory!

Scorpion Eater
Scorpion Eater
4 years ago
Reply to  Numinous

“So both evidence and the lack of it are supposed to debunk AIT now? ”

A major problem is, most of the journalists are too stupid to detect logical fallacies. If you tell them, see, there is no evidence of Yeti in Himalayas, so this debunks AIT. And they will nod their heads in agreement 🙂

Patel
Patel
4 years ago

Razib, why don’t you block Milan? His so annoying. I had enough of his Serbian nonsense.

INDTHINGS
INDTHINGS
4 years ago
Reply to  Patel

PLEASE THIS

Hoju
Hoju
4 years ago
Reply to  Patel

“Razib, why don’t you block Milan? His so annoying. I had enough of his Serbian nonsense.”

Aww he’s just eccentric

Brown Pundits