Traces of Ancestry: Studies in Honour of Colin RenfrewMartin Jones McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2004 - 161 Seiten In 1987, Colin Renfrew's Archaeology and Language challenged many perceptions about how one language family spread across large parts of the world. In doing so he re-invigorated an important exchange between archaeologists and historical linguists. At precisely the same time, a quite separate field, human genetics, was making considerable steps forward in the elucidation of human ancestry. These three parallel lines of enquiry into genes, words, and things have, over the ensuing two decades, entirely transformed our perceptions of the human past. This volume brings together contributors to that transformation from around the world, to honour Colin Renfrew with a series of key papers. They include a number of impressive synthetic statements, as well as case studies at the frontiers of three different branches of research. They range from global accounts of human dispersal through to archaeological, genetic and linguistic studies, illustrating what has been achieved over the past two decades, and the most promising avenues of research for the future. |
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Seite 17
... Africa to the east The colonization of Eurasia was a complex process . Both the palaeoanthropological record and genetic signature of living populations indicate that there were several dispersal events out of Africa , and that these ...
... Africa to the east The colonization of Eurasia was a complex process . Both the palaeoanthropological record and genetic signature of living populations indicate that there were several dispersal events out of Africa , and that these ...
Seite 20
... Africa towards southeast Asia and Australia . Only in Australia do the two descendant groups seem not to have mixed significantly . Population movements within Africa The history of African populations in the last 100,000 years is ...
... Africa towards southeast Asia and Australia . Only in Australia do the two descendant groups seem not to have mixed significantly . Population movements within Africa The history of African populations in the last 100,000 years is ...
Seite 83
... Africa , also appear to have moved east before being carried south , al- though again some direct movement from west Af- rica is also possible . Several L3b types are found shared across Bantu speakers in Mozambique , An- gola and ...
... Africa , also appear to have moved east before being carried south , al- though again some direct movement from west Af- rica is also possible . Several L3b types are found shared across Bantu speakers in Mozambique , An- gola and ...
Inhalt
Reflecting on Five Decades of Human Genetics | 3 |
Implications for Historical Linguistics | 11 |
Farming Languages and Genes | 31 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Academy of Sciences Africa agricultural American Journal ancestry Anthropology Archaeogenetics archaeological areas Ashkenazi Asia Austronesian Bandelt Bantu speakers Bellwood Bellwood & Renfrew Biology Cambridge Cavalli-Sforza Celtic cent central chromosome Colin Renfrew colonization communities Cornish cultural demic diffusion demographic Dereivka dispersals early East eastern ecological ethnic Eurasian Europe European evidence evolutionary expansion farmers farming farming/language Forster FOXP2 genes geographical groups guages gwary haplogroup haplotypes hominins human evolution Human Genetics human populations hunter-gatherer Indo-European Jewish Jews Journal of Human kurgan L.L. Cavalli-Sforza Lahr language language shift Lemba lineages linguistic diversity Macaulay markers McDonald Institute Mesolithic migration mitochondrial DNA modern humans mtDNA mtDNA type mutation Neolithic origin of modern Padel Passarino patterns Pleistocene polymorphisms prehistory Proto-Algonquian region Renfrew eds Research Richards sample southeast southern spread Stringer studies thoracic vertebrae tion Torroni ture Underhill University Press Upper Palaeolithic variation vertebrae Y-chromosome Zvelebil