posted on 2007-05-04, 10:51authored byLluis Quintana-Murci, Csilla Krausz, Tatiana Zerjal, S. Hamid Sayar, Michael F. Hammer, S. Qasim Mehdi, Qasim Ayub, Raheel Qamar, Aisha Mohyuddin, Uppala Radhakrishna, Mark A. Jobling, Chris Tyler-Smith, Ken McElreavey
The origins and dispersal of farming and pastoral nomadism in southwestern Asia are complex, and there is controversy about whether they were associated with cultural transmission or demic diffusion. In addition, the spread of these technological innovations has been associated with the dispersal of Dravidian and Indo-Iranian
languages in southwestern Asia. Here we present genetic evidence for the occurrence of two major population movements, supporting a model of demic diffusion of early farmers from southwestern Iran—and of pastoral nomads from western and central Asia—into India, associated with Dravidian and Indo-European–language dispersals,
respectively.
History
Citation
American Journal of Human Genetics, 2001, 68, pp. 537-542.
Published in
American Journal of Human Genetics
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Available date
2007-05-04
Notes
This is the version as published in The American Journal of Human Genetics by University of Chicago Press. Their website is http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG/home.html