To: PapaBear3625
"3,000 BC: pastoralists (herders of cattle and sheep) spread from the steppes of Russia to both India and Europe."
Could this population also have included peoples from the far East with East Asian origins as well as peoples from the Aryan race?
8 posted on
04/08/2018 6:34:00 AM PDT by
wmileo
To: wmileo
Could this population also have included peoples from the far East with East Asian origins I would imagine that if genetic analysis indicated this, that it would have been mentioned.
The herding people, with their genes allowing digestion of milk from cows and sheep, probably led to a population boom, by reducing infant mortality through better diet.
10 posted on
04/08/2018 6:42:20 AM PDT by
PapaBear3625
(Big governent is attractive to those who think that THEY will be in control of it.)
To: wmileo
No, there were no East Asians west of the Gobi in 3000 BC
The migrations starting with the Xiongnu (proto-Mongolic/Turkic) started only around 200 to 100 BC when the Han Dynasty won wars against them pushing them west
Some Tibeto-Burmese folks were already there in India's north-east when the Dravidians first came
26 posted on
04/12/2018 11:13:53 PM PDT by
Cronos
(Obama's dislike of Assad is not based on his brutality but that he isn't a jihadi Moslem)
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