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  2. Yamnaya culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamnaya_culture

    The Yamnaya culture [a] or the Yamna culture, [b] also known as the Pit Grave culture or Ochre Grave culture, is a late Eneolithic (Copper Age) to early Bronze Age archaeological culture concentrating in the region between the Southern Bug, Dniester, and Ural rivers (the Pontic–Caspian steppe), but extending to the Carpathian Basin in the west and the Altai Mountains in the east, and dating ...

  3. Western Steppe Herders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Steppe_Herders

    This ancestry profile is known as 'Eneolithic Steppe' ancestry, or 'pre-Yamnaya ancestry', and is represented by ancient individuals from the Khvalynsk II and Progress 2 archaeological sites. These individuals are chronologically intermediate between EHGs and the later Yamnaya population, and harbour very variable proportions of CHG ancestry.

  4. Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetics_and_archaeo...

    The Indus Periphery ancestry, around the 2nd millennium BCE, mixed with another West Eurasian wave, the incoming mostly male-mediated Yamnaya-Steppe component (archaeogenetically dubbed the Western Steppe Herders) to form the Ancestral North Indians (ANI), while at the same time it contributed to the formation of Ancestral South Indians (ASI ...

  5. Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactria–Margiana...

    The samples extracted from the BMAC sites did not have derived any part of their ancestry from the Yamnaya people, who are associated with Proto-Indo-Europeans, although some peripheral samples did already carry significant Yamnaya-like Western Steppe Herders ancestry, inline with the southwards expansion of Western Steppe Herders from the ...

  6. File:Yamnaya pastoralists, main genetic ancestry.png

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Yamnaya_pastoralists...

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  7. Indo-European migrations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_migrations

    Partly for these reasons, Anthony concludes that Bronze Age Caucasus groups such as the Maykop "played only a minor role, if any, in the formation of Yamnaya ancestry." According to Anthony, the roots of Proto-Indo-European (archaic or proto-proto-Indo-European) were mainly in the steppe rather than the south.

  8. Proto-Indo-European homeland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_homeland

    [28] [29] Referring to Wang et al. (2019), he notes that the Anatolian Farmer component in the Yamnaya-ancestry came from European farmers, not from the Maykop, which had too much Anatolian farmer ancestry to be ancestral to the Yamnaya-population. [108]

  9. Corded Ware culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corded_Ware_culture

    Heyd (2017) has cautioned to be careful with drawing too strong conclusions from those genetic similarities between Corded Ware and Yamnaya, noting the small number of samples; the late dates of the Esperstadt graves, which could also have undergone Bell Beaker admixture; the presence of Yamnaya ancestry in western Europe before the Danube ...