Talk:Indo-European migrations

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Edit 15 November 2022

Magyar25 has made various improvements to the wording of this article. In the section Archaeology: migrations from the steppe Urheimat, there is a new wording: Alternatively, David Reich has proposed that archaic PIE originated in the Caucasus, from where archaic PIE speaking people migrated into Anatolia. This was previously: Alternatively, David Reich has mentioned that the possibility exists that archaic PIE originated in the Caucasus, from where archaic PIE speaking people migrated into Anatolia. The new version is much more positive about the ‘possibility’ of archaic PIE originating in the Caucasus. I don’t have access to the sources. Any comments on this? Sweet6970 (talk) 11:57, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]

I can only access (Serangeli 2020) right now, and it proposes that Proto-Anatolian may have originated in the Volga-Don region of the Caucasus steppes, not archaic PIE (although it slightly hints that archaic PIE did by stating the ancestors of the Yamnaya culture also originated there). I won't be updating the proposed/mentioned that the possibility exists wording, but I will change "archaic PIE" to "Proto-Anatolian".
Edit: I just realized the sentence says that this was proposed by Reich. I'll read his paper later and update accordingly. JungleEntity (talk) 20:08, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Do you have a link to Serangeli 2020 (and/or the name of the work/paper/book) that you can post? Thank you. Skllagyook (talk) 20:34, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Need more red flags? This change is another one:
  • old: When Yamnaya Indo-European speakers came into contact with the indigenous peoples during the third millennium BCE, they came to dominate the local populations, yet parts of the indigenous lexicon persisted in the formation of Proto-Germanic, thus lending to the Germanic languages the status of Indo-Europeanized languages.
  • new: When Yamnaya Indo-European speakers came to dominate the indigenous peoples during the third millennium BCE, parts of the indigenous lexicon persisted in the new Proto-Germanic creoles, making them Indo-Europeanized languages.
The changed text was based on Jones-Bley (1997). I don't have access to the source, but I serious wonder if the term "Proto-Germanic creoles" is mentioned there. Not every impact of a substratum language is a case of creolization.
If one or two of these "improvements to the wording of this article" turn out to be WP:CUCKOO-edits, I suggest to revert the entire string of edits. –Austronesier (talk) 20:50, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Good catch. The only copy I can find of Jones-Bley (1997) is in German, but I would remove "Proto-Germanic creoles" I'm quite positive that isn't the wording used in the original source. I also can't find an online version of Reich's book, Who We Are and How We Got Here (although it is at my university's library, which I will check later), but it doesn't seem to be "academic" enough to be included here, and the book has been met with equal praise and criticism from all over the genetics world. I may be biased because I'm involved in this field, but from my understanding linking genetic migrations with linguistic migrations has been met with some heavy skepticism (This review talks more about historical linguists trouble with genetic population migration studies).
I think it's best to remove the Reich section for now, and I don't oppose reverting the wording edits by Magyar25, though I don't mind the editing he did to my wording in the Pre-Proto-Indo-European section. JungleEntity (talk) 21:26, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I'm a historical linguist and not very happy either with simplistic models that equate different layers of evidence, but when it to comes to Reich vs. Quiles, uhm, my choice goes without hesitation for Reich. –Austronesier (talk) 21:40, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I know of some of Carlos's... controversial maps and research (which I don't agree with either), but I still don't think that gives a pass to Reich. I only linked indo-european.eu because I think the review he gave for Reich goes through a lot of gripes historical linguistics have with studies like Reich's.
Barring the German paper, Serangeli (2020) seems to just cite back to Reich. If anything, I think we should revert to the previous wording and only include Reich as the source. JungleEntity (talk) 22:48, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I'm only accessing it through my uni's library, sorry. The book is "Dispersals and Diversification : Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on the Early Stages of Indo-European." and the section is "Introduction: Dispersals and Diversification of the Indo-European Languages". The only two mentions of archaic PIE in the context of a homeland are this: "Reich (2018: 107– 109, 120) and Kristiansen et al. (2018) suggested that a Caucasian homeland for archaic PIE (pre-Maikop and Maikop) could be combined with a steppe homeland for late PIE (Yamnaya), if Yamnaya could be derived culturally and genetically (and then, arguably also linguistically) from Maikop. Yamnaya clearly had southern (CHG) genetic ancestry and was influenced culturally by Maikop, adopting several new technologies from Maikop— arsenical bronze-making, bivalve casting molds, cast copper tanged daggers, cast copper shaft-hole axes, and possibly wheeled vehicles (Korenevskii 2012; Kohl 2007: 72– 86). But it was unknown whether Maikop could have been the genetic source of CHG ancestry in Yamnaya, because a good sample of Maikop and older genomes from graves in the North Caucasus piedmont and steppes had not been published."
and this: "The language of the Suvorovo migrants and of their Cernavoda I descendants is unknown, and their DNA has not been reported. At this early moment in the publication of aDNA, it seems to me that the most likely place for the archaic PIE (Indo-Hittite) homeland would be in the Volga-Caucasus steppes east of the Don, where the oldest admixture of EHG and CHG occurred in the fifth millennium BC or earlier; from which the Varna chiefs accepted a few mates; and where Yamnaya ancestry emerged in the fourth millennium BC. An archaic dialect of PIE, the parent of Anatolian, could have moved from the Volga-Don region into the Danube valley with the Suvorovo migrants and their Volga-Caucasus-style stone maces." JungleEntity (talk) 21:33, 16 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I have no technical knowledge of the matters involved here, which is why I asked for comments. I am grateful for the response.
(1) Reich’s view of the possible homeland for archaic PIE: Both the old and new versions of the comment are about the possibility of the homeland being in the Caucasus. But it looks to me that the quotes provided above by JungleEntity do not support either the old or the new version – they are much more tentative, and refer to the steppes as well as the Caucasus. Have I understood this correctly? And if so, should the sentence simply be deleted, or is there another wording which would be suitable?
(2) Proto-Germanic: Austronesier has objected to the change which refers to Proto-Germanic creoles. Is there agreement that this change should be reversed?
(3) My impression is that these edits were intended to be simple copy edits, but that the effect has been to change the meaning in some instances. Austronesier has suggested that all the edits on 15 November should simply be reversed. What is the view on this, with/without the deletion I suggested in (1) ?
Courtesy ping to Skllagyook as well.
Sweet6970 (talk) 15:31, 17 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
1: I think it would be best to remove the section commenting on Reich's "proposal". It's such a niche opinion that isn't widely accepted by the field so I think it qualifies for WP:TOOMUCH. If the reader is truly interested on where PIE might of been spoken, they can find someone's non-widely-accepted opinion themselves.
2: I think we shouldn't refer to it as a creole. You can probably make an argument for it, but I think it's best to remove so readers aren't mislead.
3: I think the edits should be reverted, but I vouch for the changes Magyar25 made to my previous edit as it doesn't change anything substantial.
JungleEntity (talk) 23:07, 17 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]
In view of the comments above, I have reversed the edits made on 15 November 2022, and deleted the sentence Alternatively, David Reich has mentioned that the possibility exists that archaic PIE originated in the Caucasus, from where archaic PIE speaking people migrated into Anatolia. Sweet6970 (talk) 12:30, 20 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Overemotive language.

In the 'Europe' section. Do we really need statements like 'Danish archaeologist Kristian Kristiansen said he is "increasingly convinced there must have been a kind of genocide."'

Anyone using phrases like 'a kind of' is bad enough, but use of the word 'genocide' is controversial to say the least.

Does the statement belong in an encyclopedia, particularly given that its citation refers to an article entitled 80.41.186.165 (talk) 13:20, 19 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

The reference given after: 'Danish archaeologist Kristian Kristiansen said he is "increasingly convinced there must have been a kind of genocide."' is entitled 'Story of most murderous people of all time revealed by ancient DNA'. Yes it was published in New Scientist, but is this appropriate source material for Wikipedia? I smell wokery (sorry for the word). If anyone wrote an article with the same title to describe what happened to Neanderthals or Homo Erectus by the move out of Africa it would be ignored, if not cancelled (sorry for the word).

We don't need culture wars or SJWs in encyclopedias. 80.41.186.165 (talk) 13:37, 19 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

It wasn't a genocide: it was a "special demographic operation". Seriously though, if that's what Kristiansen thinks, it's fine to quote him on that.  Tewdar  14:51, 19 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, the article's from New Scientist, but it's still an article and not a scholarly paper. We can do a bit better for something as detailed as this, along with introduce other sources that conflict with the "invasion-migration" conclusions made here.
The only one bringing up "culture wars" or "SJWs" is you, though. Not so fun fact, genocide is an actual thing that happens and has happened, and if it happened here it would be valid to say so but in the scenario you brought up, the main point would be if it's an accurate way to describe the population replacement (if one actually occurred). It probably wouldn't apply to Neanderthals, as that was probably more a case of hybridization from a larger population + resource competition hindering population growth + habitat loss in a process that took many thousands of years. What Kristiansen and other researchers are referring to is the idea of a violent migration of PIE speakers who killed or conquered within the same generation, an idea that has a lot more scholarly literature against than what the article immediately seems to imply. No cancellation paranoia necessary, it's just a matter of if the article is properly representing the whole of scientific opinion. TangoFett (talk) 11:46, 13 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Genocide, however, implies intent – specifically the intent to eradicate a whole ethnic group. (And there's nothing "emotive" about it. It's a factual term.) It makes little if any sense to talk of genocides in the prehistoric period. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 19:21, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Seconding need for update

The first sections of the article are pretty outdated in light of works like Lazaridis et al 2022 as well as Kroonen et al 2022 and other linguistic works that refute the argument that Balto-Slavic is related to Indo-Iranian. The Kurgan hypothesis has also changed: Anthony has proposed a revised version which is not a Kurgan hypothesis. The article is like an incomplete mashup right now and would need a rewrite, perhaps even summing up older arguments and information and focusing on more recent ones, which are not as thoroughly explained. To put it plainly, the narrative it weaves is one mostly stuck in the past, ignoring modern research. This is due to a lack of detailed analysis of recent research and a disproportionate focus on older analysis and hypotheses. 2A02:85F:E03B:3E00:2946:D607:82A3:9EBA (talk) 22:44, 9 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Balto-Slavic is obviously related to Indo-Iranian. We just don't know how closely. There are obvious similarities between the two branches, but there isn't a consensus in Indo-European linguistics on what that means exactly, and there hasn't been for a long time. It's by no means a new idea that they might not be particularly closely related (no closer even than any of the other "core IE" braches, perhaps), nor is it particularly relevant to the homeland debate (and this article isn't even primarily about the homeland). That early forms of Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian were spoken in Eastern Europe in the third millennium BC is still highly likely, regardless of how closely related they might have been.
Determining the relationships between the major branches (Indo-Iranian, Balto-Slavic, Albanian, Armenian, Graeco-Phrygian, Anatolian, Tocharian, Italic, Celtic, Germanic) is notoriously difficult anyway, so it's not such a big deal. Linguists have long tended to effectively treat the differentiation of IE (especially "core IE") as an "explosion" into a number of distinct branches without any significant interrelationships (with the possible exception of Italo-Celtic), only later areal contact that has obscured the picture.
Anthony (2007) has only dropped the "Kurgan culture" moniker, which has long been controversial anyway, but the steppe hypothesis hasn't been essentially changed by him, so the relevance is unclear. Even if the term "Kurgan culture" is not favoured anymore, the term "Kurgan hypothesis" is still a valid synonym of "steppe hypothesis". --Florian Blaschke (talk) 19:47, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Heggarty's Hybrid Hypothesis

Heggarty

There is an article in the Independent of 28 July 2023 [1] about the paper Haagerty at al. (2023), Language trees with sampled ancestors support a hybrid model for the origin of Indo-European languages, published in Science [2] on the same day. This includes ‘The latest research points to a new hybrid hypothesis for the origin of the Indo-European languages with a homeland south of the Caucasus and a subsequent branch northwards onto the Steppe, as a secondary homeland for some branches of Indo-European entering Europe with the later Yamnaya and Corded Ware-associated expansions.’and ‘“Recent ancient DNA data suggest that the Anatolian branch of Indo-European did not emerge from the Steppe, but from further south, in or near the northern arc of the Fertile Crescent—as the earliest source of the Indo-European family,” Paul Heggarty, another author of the study, said. “Our language family tree topology, and our lineage split dates, point to other early branches that may also have spread directly from there, not through the Steppe,” Dr Heggarty said. The summary of the Science paper (I do not have access to the full paper) also includes: ‘Indo-Iranic has no close relationship with Balto-Slavic, weakening the case for it having spread via the steppe.

There is a map in the Independent, which is not very clear, but it seems to show Greek and Albanian as having spread directly from Anatolia, and leaves the origin of Celtic as unspecified. There are various arrows and question marks for the spread of the Indo-Iranian languages.

I request that someone who has more technical knowledge of this subject than I have should add information about this latest hypothesis to this article, and to the article on the Proto-Indo-European homeland. Sweet6970 (talk) 10:35, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think that this source should be added because it represents a very WP:FRINGE point which won't find any acceptance in the academic community. It directly contradicts all studies which have been published in 2023 and all studies which will be published after September and all studies which are scheduled to be published in early 2024. Many glottochronological studies which have been published over the years have proposed various alternative dispersion routes for IE languages, but they're not included in relevant articles because most times these alternative scenarios are highly improbable.--Maleschreiber (talk) 11:17, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
According to WP:FRINGE a Wikipedia article should not make a fringe theory appear more notable or more widely accepted than it is.. It does not say that it should not be mentioned at all. And according to Wikipdedia, Science is one of the world's top academic journals so I don’t think we should ignore this. Sweet6970 (talk) 11:40, 30 July 2023 (UTC) |[reply]
I think it is rather flippant to dismiss this new study from Science out of hand as "very fringe," and a mischaracterization. The Near Eastern model for the origin of Indo-European is not an outlier theory, and has been gaining rigorous scholarly attention in recent years. Further, your criticism isn't based on anything concrete, such as methodology. I think the fact that this new study is more than just a glottochronological study, but also an interdisciplinary work that draws from insights in archeology, anthropology, and genetics, warrants that it be given serious attention. Jpd50616 (talk) 11:46, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Max Planck Institute... I suggest we wait for some scholarly responses, before we add this. Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 11:49, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I concur with User:Maleschreiber and User:Joshua Jonathan, although not out of a priori rejection. It's a new, uncited paper for which the jury is still out, so presenting it here and now violates WP:DUE. We may include novel research results from subject matter experts published in subject matter-related journals with due weight, but not from sources that partially use WP:FRINGE-methodology published in journals that are not dedicated to the field. Science is specialized in science, but not in historical-comparative linguistics. If the linguistic part of this interdisciplinary project was based on uncontroversial mainstream historical-comparative methods, I would consider a preliminary mention of the paper much less problematic.
If such sources gain major attention in secondary sources (beyond news reports), we may include some mention of them with due weight. But let's all have a look and thorough read first, maybe things aren't as bad as the Independent makes them look. Keep in mind that the Independent was capable of shitposts like calling the Tarim mummies "China's celtic mummies"[3]. –Austronesier (talk) 11:51, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with the statement that we shouldn't make a fringe theory appear more notable or widely accepted than it is and that we shouldn't just ignore the study. As this was just published, we can only compare it to other high profile publications which have been published in the last 5 years and they don't support such an opinion. I believe that throughout the year there will be several reviews of this study and then we can decide how to engage with it. There's no need to rush for its inclusion as we can wait for academic reviews to be published and then we can discuss how to depict them in the article. @Jpd50616: Claims of interdisciplinarity in such studies often mask a complete lack of interdisciplinarity, but I agree with @Joshua Jonathan: that we should we wait for responses from the academic community.--Maleschreiber (talk) 11:55, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Interestingly, I recall R1a#Proposed Transcaucasia and West Asian origins and possible influence on Indus Valley Civilization, Part of the South Asian genetic ancestry derives from west Eurasian populations, and some researchers have implied that Z93 may have come to India via Iran[36] and expanded there during the Indus Valley civilization.[2][37]. That always seemed weird, but noteworthy, and in this context, quite relevant. Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 12:01, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that it is a very recent publication, and we are here to report established consensus. It is also not fringe, it is a new analysis which uses newish evidence to unite the current leading hypothesis with lagging, but longstanding and respectable, hypotheses in this area of study into a coherent, albeit complicated, synthesis. I'm not competent to criticize the methods, though they look respectable to my eye, and whether it achieves general acceptance only time and much analysis will tell. But I do suggest that it's worth giving a very brief outline of its main points. Richard Keatinge (talk) 12:47, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The claim of interdisciplinarity might well be technically correct (no doubt genetics, archaeology and anthropology are distinct disciplines), but a study on languages without linguistics included in the interdisciplinary mix does little to inspire confidence. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 20:15, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I concur that I it seems best to wait until the article has had some response from the relevant expert community/communities. And it does seem to make some extraordinary claims, e.g. the idea that Indo-Iranian doesn't derive from the steppe, which as far as I know, conflicts with the genetic evidence of steppe DNA in Indo-Iranian populations (e.g. in Iran and India), as well as the scholarly opinion that Indo-Iranian derived from the Corded Ware culture (through the Sintashta culture), which in turn derived from the Yamnaya or something related. Skllagyook (talk) 13:39, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The study puts PIE at c. 6000 BC (We find a median root age for Indo-European of ~8120 yr B.P. (95% highest posterior density: 6740 to 9610 yr B.P.).), well outside the 4500–2500 BC range derived from linguistic evidence, so this looks like yet another rehash of Gray/Atkinson: trying to do historical linguistics without doing historical linguistics, building trees with methods derived from genetics but without consulting actual historical linguists or having sufficient competence in the field. Not noteworthy. Ringe has already shown how to execute the same idea competently. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 20:08, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
While I don't subscribe to the theories Haagerty et al. propose, and I do think there's a big problem with "historical linguistics" studies not consulting historical linguists (has been for years, and the media loves it. "Mapping the Origins" people!), I don't think this disqualifies Haagerty et al. from being noteworthy. If it gets enough attention (again, like "Mapping the Origins"), then I think it should warrant a mention, with a line detailing criticisms as well.
Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, I think we should document ALL theories about IE origins/expansion, if they get enough attention. JungleEntity (talk) 01:23, 3 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
There are so many of those papers now – fringy, attention-grabbing papers that make a big splash among non-linguists (i. e. laypeople) but are severely criticised by linguists (i. e. relevant experts), especially their methods and conclusions – that we cannot document all of them (and definitely not as soon as they are released). It just gets tedious, and we shouldn't give bad science more attention than it deserves. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 01:41, 3 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
That is sadly the case with a lot of anthropological academia nowadays. I agree, we shouldn’t give these people a podium, but if it gets enough attention, I think it should be included in Wikipedia. It’s better to include it (once again, if it has enough attention), while also pointing out that most experts in the field disagree with the data or methodology of the project. The alternative is not including it at all, which I think brings more harm. I’ve been lucky enough to study IE linguistics in an academic setting, and I can see how saturated the field is right now. I can’t imagine what it might be like for a layperson, with the IE journals left are dying or are off the wall, and fringe theories seeping there way more and more into the top of YouTube and Google results. In recent years, the only big publication I’ve seen addressing this problem is “The Indo-European Controversy” by Pereltsvaig and Lewis, and that is still paywalled (I think? I can’t tell with university access, although I remember not being able to find a copy when away from uni).
Wikipedia might be the only place where people interested in IE studies can easily see “Yes, this research project has gotten a bunch of attention in the press recently, but historical linguists have criticized it for x and y.” JungleEntity (talk) 15:25, 3 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]

After a cursory reading of the paper and parts of the Supplementary Information, I want to clarify on three points:

1. "It's an interdisciplinary paper" – True, the list of authors includes scholars from various disciplines, and the final conclusions of the paper concerning linguistic archeology (= speculations about the linguistic identity of archeological cultures and genomically defined populations) are certainly a collective effort. But the main part of the paper on which all subsequent conclusions hinge is the computational phylogeny of the IE language complete with split date estimates. No new archeological and genomic are presented to complete the picture; the latest phylogeny of Gray's team is just grafted onto existing models of the demic spread of genes and cultures. I.e., it is primarily a linguistic paper with an interdisciplinary appendix. And again, trying to sell research result from one's discipline in a non-specialist journal is a big red flag.

2. "It is not fringe" - If the conclusions of this paper are at odds with a long-grown consensus about the linguistic archeology of IE languages, that certainly doesn't make it a fringe paper. Linguistic archeology is essentially speculative and rests on the plausibilty of inherently unprovable assertions (such as the linguistic identity of pre-literary ancient peoples). BUT: the methodology employed to arrive at the proposed phylogeny IS fringe. Quantitative computational methods in linguistics are increasingly accepted in the field as long as they are not promoted as supplanting well-established qualitative methods. Quantitative methods remain controversial in the field, and among computational linguists, Gray's methods are not widely accepted. As Ringe has nicely put it, Gray's methods have been destroyed under scrutiny from experts with knowledge in both "conventional" historical linguistics and computational linguists.

3. "Historical linguists were not consulted" – Historical linguists were involved, but just as "cognacy deciders". Consider the implications: a big computational apparatus is set into motion in order find the objectively best fit of the data (NB the entire paper itself is data-free), but at the bottom, the tree rest on heuristic subjective judgements that are directly linked to a preconceived notion of the phylogeny. We cannot reconstruct proto-forms at the highest level without a subgrouping model, otherwise we cannot distinguish retentions from innovations. So unlike in genomics, where we have unambiguous objective matches between A, C, G, and T, in linguistics it is the tree that implicitly determines cognacy decisions, which in turn serve as input to build a tree. Historical linguists were certainly consulted, but not for their expert capability to produce results through reasoning. Their role is reduced to serve as data feeders. –Austronesier (talk) 21:35, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Here are some more critical comments. I can't access the Science-article (yet), but the map seems to suggest that (Indo-)Iranian arrived in India from Iran, and that the IVC was IE-speaking. That's bizarre. The IVC gene pole was partly derived from Iranian hunter-gatherers (the same sort of people who contributed CHG to the steppe, I suppose), but that's another migration; are they mixing-up different migrations? And what about Sintashta, and the relation between Vedic practices and Sintashta? Some sort of Out-of-India? Looking forward to Davinsky's Stalin-orgel going loose on this study... Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 21:49, 30 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Their map is a combination of the steppe-model and the farming-model; see here. Hocus pocus. Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 04:34, 31 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The Imgur link gives a 404 error for me. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 17:26, 2 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Davidski's commentary: We're dealing with a bunch of [insert preferred insult here]. Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 17:47, 12 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Davidski is an absolute idiot who doesn't believe in any scientific research. 204.18.231.97 (talk) 03:46, 13 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@IP (or @MojtabaShahmiri, it's you, no?): I rarely feel the urge to agree with you, but this time I concur that certain amateur voices simply don't need even to be mentioned here in a talk page when it comes to the assessement of a linguistic phylogeny. Whatever comes out from linguistic research needs to be evaluated as such and not from a dogmatic POV that only can handle linguistic data when it provides a one-to-one match with population genomics. –Austronesier (talk) 18:22, 15 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Criticism

This article contains scholarly criticism of Heggarty et al. (2023).Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 20:57, 5 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

"Hypothesized" in opener

Given the state of the evidence right now, does it make sense to call the Indo-European migrations "hypothesized"? It seems like a strong consensus around major migrations has developed since we started to get lots of autosomal DNA evidence a little over a decade ago. Obviously there are still many details, some major, to be worked out, but are there any real competing hypotheses still out there?

Even if the term isn't wrong per se in this context, to the average person "hypothesis" means something like "educated guess." Just think about how much of a field day Creationists have had with the ridiculous "evolution is just a theory" argument.

I just made an edit to a similar effect on the Bantu expansion page. DuxEgregius (talk) 22:24, 29 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think it's necessary in either case. Even with DNA evidence, reconstructions of historical events are always hypothetical, that's how history and archaeology work. Remsense 02:34, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Good point. I think in both cases it's a relic from when the evidence was less conclusive. DuxEgregius (talk) 08:00, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As an archaeologist, I'd push back rather strongly against the idea that we (or historian and geneticist colleagues) cannot offer anything more certain than 'hypothetical' reconstructions of events. I don't think that's in line with mainstream thinking on the philosophy of archaeology and other palaeosciences, at all.
On the specific point, I think it's still appropriate to describe these as "hypothesized" migrations. aDNA has proven that there was substantial gene flow from the Eurasian steppe outwards c. 4500 years ago. Whether that gene flow is the result of the specific form of human movement implied by migration, as well as to what extent it was associated with Indo-European languages, is still very much up for debate. – Joe (talk) 08:11, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think we believe the same thing but our public use of words have different boundaries. I'm equally happy retracting my point and just saying "model" or "theory" instead of "hypothesis" at any rate. Remsense 08:49, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As a historical linguist, I don't think that "hypothesized" puts our readers on the wrong track, even when understood in the "popular" sense" of the word. We could safely remove "hypothesized" if this article was entitled "Bronze-Age pastoralist migrations", but unfortunately, it carries the linguistic term "Indo-European" in its title. Archaeogenetics has uncovered a lot of rapid gene flow in certain parts of Eurasia during the Bronze Age paired with the spread of technology, subsistence methods and cultural practices which can well be labelled migrations (especially in the steppe, but less so in Central and SE Europe, where intensity and speed of steppe-related gene flow is compatible with less dramatic scenarios of population shifts).
But the association of these spatiotemporally manifest events with the expansion of the Indo-European languages is by its very nature hypothetical, and most likely will remain so until the invention of time machines or devices that allow to reconstruct sound waves at any time and place in history. The only records of Indo-European languages in the Bronze Age come from Ancient Greece and Anatolia, which means that for the most part, the Indo-European migrations happened behind the veil of the literary record. Yes, linguists have developed very sophisitcated methods to probe into the past way beyond literacy (I myself work in an area with minimal literary records and therefore heavily rely on such methods), but matching the findings of this methods with manifest archaeological and biological (archaeogenetic, palaeobotantical etc.) data is always hypothetical—ranging from "speculative" to "highly plausible". –Austronesier (talk) 12:06, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Massive new paper out on the origins of Indo-Europeans

By Harvard https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.04.17.589597v1 David Anthony himself is co-author, is this pointing to abandoning the Kurgan model as mainstream? This seems to be the mainstream now, endorsed by the major genetic labs and Anthony himself, at least regarding the very first expansion of IE 2A02:85F:E0D4:3F00:A0BA:B4E2:FF3E:2B0 (talk) 12:20, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

No, it's definitely not an abandonment of the Kurgan-model, more a modification. Joshua Jonathan - Let's talk! 14:32, 26 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]