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Yes, over time, the different Indo-European-speaking branches had obviously assimilated a quite wide range of haplogroups (I1 - the oldest Y-DNA haplogroup in Northern Europe, was assimilated into what would be the proto-Germanic branch, for instance).
But IE-languages haven't always been spoken by a wide range of people. It had to begin with smaller, specifically Indo-European tribes who first began to speak the proto-Indo European language. These first IE-speaking tribal groups didn't have to be 100% homogeneous with regards to Y-DNA and mtDNA haplogroups, of course, but we can probably be pretty much sure that some haplogroups would have been much more prevalent among them than others. Many people believe R1a was most likely this haplogroup.
I was a bit too quick to vote in the poll here, and I'm not able to delete my vote unfortunately. Even the "experts" argue about different hypotheses, and I don't feel I know enough about the topic to be completely convinced about the truth of one of these theories. We will probably sort this out in the future.


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Not by genetists but some linguists and archeologists who base this on chariots and horses which they believe where domesticated first in the steppes however. the first linguistic traces of Indo Europeans are from Anatolia (The Hethits) who are believed to have come from a city Southeast of Anatolia.

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Highest North European/Atlanti-Baltic component is found among Finno-Ugric speaking Finns.
What I believe there were two Indo European waves. The first and original from West Asia into the steppes, where they mixed with North European Hunthers and Gatheres and become West Asian/North European by autosomal data. And the one which moved into North and Central Europe became more "North European" while the one moving into West Asia became more West Asian.


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Obviously Eastern Europe and not Asia. This takes fauna and flora in account. The caucus mountains could never support the population needed for the massive aryan invasion.


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Where did I say something like that? I said the first and the oldest attested Indo European language was Hittite. And something like "proto Indo European" language was never found no where and was just reconstructed based on the "idea" of linguists how it might have been.
Last edited by Demhat; 07-07-2012 at 07:01 PM.
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