1
Here are very interesting maps taking unto account R1.
http://indo-european.info/indoeuropean/
http://indo-european.info/indoeurope...ean-migration/
Recent maps on Indo-European migration: Cultures, peoples, languages, and Y-DNA
These are images from the article Indo-European diffusion model:
https://www.researchgate.net/publica...iffusion_model
https://www.academia.edu/31707046/In...iffusion_model
They are centered on European prehistory and history, and their Eurasian connections, so the borders of cultures and peoples beyond the Urals (especially South Asia) are more inexact. Also, cultures and peoples from the Altai region and Africa are less clearly defined in the maps. The maps were drawn to illustrate certain points in the aforementioned article, thus they are diachronic illustrations of different cultures and peoples not exactly contemporary with each other, but often sequential in time, used to illustrate certain developments, e.g. the neolithic expansion of farming, or the chalcolithic expansion from Yamna. In that sense, they are not different from many maps used to illustrate cultural expansions and migrations of peoples.
Please report any errors by writing an email to cquiles@dnghu.org, attaching a link, map, article, or book (with pages) for reference – unless it is a clear mistake -, and I will correct them as soon as possible.
They have been drawn with Photoshop over Natural Earth raster images that are in the public domain.
You can reuse and modify the images posted here as you see fit, but you have to cite the article, and – if you use these high-quality images – you have to refer to this website (http://indo-european.info/) as the source. Thank you.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
These are full versions of the images used in the article (compressed as JPEG). If you would like higher quality versions, different versions (with changes, omissions and/or additions), or different permissions to publish (e.g. in scientific journals which do not allow the use of a Creative Commons license), please write me at cquiles@dnghu.org. I really like to work with maps, and if the project is interesting I will probably not mind working for it.
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