Posted on 07/19/2025 9:46:08 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Where did... Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian -- come from? ...
The analysis, led by a pair of recent graduates with oversight from ancient DNA expert David Reich, integrated genetic data on 180 newly sequenced Siberians with more than 1,000 existing samples covering many continents and about 11,000 years of human history. The results, published this month in the journal Nature, identify the prehistoric progenitors of two important language families, including Uralic, spoken today by more than 25 million people.
The study finds the ancestors of present-day Uralic speakers living about 4,500 years ago in northeastern Siberia, within an area now known as Yakutia...
Uralic-speaking cultures vary in how much Yakutia ancestry they carry.
Estonians retain about 2 percent, Finns about 10. At the eastern end of the distribution, the Nganasan people -- clustered at the northernmost tip of Russia -- have close to 100 percent Yakutia ancestry. At the other extreme, modern-day Hungarians have lost nearly all of theirs...
A separate finding concerns another group of Siberian-spawned languages, once widely spoken across the region. The Yeniseian language family may be contracting today, with the last survivor being central Siberia's critically endangered Ket, now spoken by just a handful of the culture's elders. But Yeniseian's influence was long evident to linguists and archaeologists alike...
The study locates the first speakers of the Yeniseian family some 5,400 years ago near the deep waters of Lake Baikal, its southern shores just a few hours by car from the current border with Mongolia.
The genetic findings also provide the first genetic signal -- albeit a tentative one -- for Western Washington University linguist Edward Vajda's Dene-Yeniseian hypothesis, which proposed genealogical connections between Yeniseian and the Na-Dene family of North American Indigenous languages.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.harvard.edu ...
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It could be that Dravidian is the greatly evolved modern descendant of Harappan, that wouldn’t surprise me one bit. Of course, until Harappan can be read...
I think there isn’t enough evidence to draw a definitive conclusion, but I’m convinced
Good dad joke.
Most of the Hungarians I know and work with are Slavic but with some non Slavic features like lower cheekbones.
FWIW, my dad's best friend while serving in the US army in the SPT was a Finnish immigrant, my dad a Norwegian immigrant.
Both came to America as young children, but both could speak some of their native tongues, but neither could understand each other's. My dad could understand some German and of course Danish though as there were enough similarities.
I don't know if its the mixing or what, but HOLY CRAP are Hungarian girls hot. My god! I'd rate them as THE hottest I've seen with Brazilian girls coming in second. When I'd meet up with other expats while living in Budapest we used to jokingly ask if it was bad for your health to walk around with a permanent erection.
Hmm.. I prefer Polski or Ukrainian chicks. Hungarian women are hot too, but the ones in smaller cities like Szeged have a nicer attitudes
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