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Those maps aren't 100% accurate, I just knocked them together in a few minutes yesterday. I'd now shrink the South Caucasian area and have most of Europe south of Ukraine speaking Afro-Asiatic with just a few South Caucasians in the mountains.
Romania should be Afro-Asiatic, I may redraw the maps as I think about it more.
BTW, do look into some of Theo Venneman's theories - they're only controversial because people don't want to believe Europe may once have spoken languages akin to Arabic.


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Here I agree, Such components from calculators do not exist in reality and can give just and idea how they might have been. I believe they were mostly West Asian like with some North Euro input.
So and which does? North European which is strongest among asian admixed (not even entirely Caucasoid to begin with) finno-Ugric people?The only way to find out the right lineage is to look at which lineage best matches the linguistic results.
Your making it to easy for me friend. So West Asia has not been a area of repeated linguistic expansion? Iranics, Semites, Mongols, Sumerians, Caucasians and Turkic tribes did never set a foot on West Asian land?This is easy: the steppe has been an area of repeated linguistic expansion: PIE, Iranian, later Iranian, Bolghar Turkic (Hunnic), Avarian, Hungarian, Kipchak Turkic etc. Linguistic and migrational waves one after another! The steppe is the one particular region where linguistic continuity cannot have deep roots.
Also most of your arguments are just based on assumptions not on facts.
Please clarify which linguistic "results" you mean. Are you talking about the highly speculative assumptions of some Linguists placing their assumed "Proto Indo European" language into the steppes simply for the laughable supposition horse domestication has started there, but not taking in account all the components among Indo Europeans which are clearly of West Asian origin.It still is the region which best fits the linguistic results: it is the best candidate for Proto-Indo-European homeland.
There are only two ways of how Indo Europeans developed.
1. A Group of West Asian Pastoralists moved into the steppes, mixed with the local Hunthers and Gatheres and created a new language called "Indo-European"
2. A Group of West Asian, already Indo European Pastoralists moved into the steppes and the local Hunthers and Gatheres adopted the language and lifestyle. Later on the "Northern Indo European" (the Hunthers and Gatheres from the Steppes) groups Indo Europeanized vast areas of North- Central Europe, Central Asia and re Indo Europeanized parts of West Asia in form of Iranics, while the Southern Indo European (Proto Indo Europeans of West Asia took other roots from the Balkans and through See to Indo Europeanize West Europe, the Balkans parts of Central, East and South Asia.



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A lot of this has to do with migration because of the Ice Age.
http://www.eupedia.com/europe/neolit...rope_map.shtml
When the ice melted, the people returned to their ancestral homelands. I've always believed in the idea that Aryans inhabited the north for a much earlier period and the Atlantean idea is cool. The elements pushed people in certain directions.


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As I already mentioned such a thing as "The Middle Eastern flora and fauna" doesnt exist because the Near East is to diverse in this and has changed many times over time.
"Steppes/Grasslands " are the best places to se pastoralism. And the Near East is where pastoralism developed.
Look at this map here. Grasslands are not absent in the Near East at all, interesting enought Grassland is strong in the area of former Halaf Culture (fertile crescent)
Forests are also not absent in West Asia.
This mght be indication that they meant some more Northern regions but not real evidences imo.
I heard about that and this is the Group which I think they have adopted Indo European languages from. Why and how could they adopt so much of Neolthic lifestyle without being under the pressure to adopt also the language spoken to be able to communicate with the Neolthic Group.The Kurgan theory suggests that the people on the Pontic Steppe came into contact with the Cucuteni-Trypillian neolithic civilisation, at that time one of the most advanced in Europe.
The IE people (Yamna) acquired technology from them and would latter help destroy that civilisation.
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Last edited by Demhat; 07-08-2012 at 12:28 PM.


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This doesnt make much sense by any meanings. Neolthic expansion took place in an area where people are known to have spoken formerly "isolated languages" and a bit later Caucasian and Indo European one. While Afro Asiatic languages where clearly introduced into West Asia (the northern part where Farming and Pastoralism developed) from an area somewhere between North Africa and the Levant and is associated with the spread of E1b1b* Haplogroup and came in contact with Neolthic Groups with the spread more into the Levant and Mesopotamia by taking some J* and G* lineages.
If we assume that Afro-Asiatic was the language of Neolthic farmers than we would have to assume that Neolthic lifestyle was introduced to West Asia through North Africa and the Levant, while it actually is the other way around and a strong Caucasoid input into Africa came from the Near East.



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Here are my revised linguistic maps of Neolithic Europe before the spread of IE:
Yamna - Proto-Indo-Europeans
Maykop and Cucteni - settled civilisations which greatly influenced the Yamna.

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Interesting maps
But too speculative and something entirely new which only works if we assume Europe and the Neolthic farmers were "Afro Asiatic" speakers before. And there are no evidences for this. In fact it cant work because Most of the lineages connected with Neolthic Groups throughout Europe have developed somewhere between East Anatolia, the Caucasus and West Iran, where the Afro Asiatic languages were introduced very lately. Haplogroup G and R1b have no connection to Afro Asiatic languages at all.

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