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Study Finds English Roots In Ancient Turkey

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  • Study Finds English Roots In Ancient Turkey

    STUDY FINDS ENGLISH ROOTS IN ANCIENT TURKEY

    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/1be0d7a2-ed22-11e1-9980-00144feab49a.html#axzz24p98rzXM
    Last updated: August 23, 2012 8:38 pm

    By Ling Ge and Clive Cookson in London

    Where do Indo-European languages come from? A new study tackles this
    200-year-old question and supports the contentious view that they first
    emerged in Anatolia - modern-day Turkey - 8,000 to 9,500 years ago,
    and spread with the expansion of farming.

    Almost 3bn people are native speakers of Indo-European languages,
    which include English, Russian and the many tongues of Europe, as
    well as Hindi and Bengali.

    Two main theories compete over the origin of the world's largest
    family of languages.

    The conventional view, first proposed by Marija Gimbutas, a
    Lithuanian-American archaeologist, places the origin in the steppes
    north of the Caspian Sea 6,000 years ago, expanding with the spread
    of a semi-nomadic horse-riding people, known as the Kurgan, across
    Europe and the near east.

    A later theory, developed by the British archaeologist Lord Renfrew,
    holds that the languages began to diverge with the spread of
    agriculture from Anatolia.

    Scientists from the University of Auckland, New Zealand, tested these
    two scenarios with international colleagues in a study published in
    the journal Science.

    They adapted a statistical method used by evolutionary biologists, but
    looking at words rather than genes. Virologists employ the technique
    to track down the origin of infectious disease outbreaks on the basis
    of genetic similarities.

    The study examined basic vocabulary terms that have a common
    origin, such as "mother," "mutter" and "madre", from 103 ancient
    and contemporary Indo-European languages. They used these words to
    infer a family tree of the languages and, together with geographic
    information about each language, traced the words back through time
    to infer the location of the tree root - the Indo-European birthplace.

    The region and age of the languages' common ancestor supported the
    Anatolian scenario.

    However, the authors think it unlikely that agriculture was the
    sole driver of language expansion on the continent. The five leading
    subfamilies of Indo-European languages all emerged between 4,000 and
    6,000 years ago, overlapping with a number of cultural expansions in
    the archaeological record. The family tree also shows that within
    each subfamily, the languages began to diversify between 2,000 and
    4,500 years ago.

    "These methods pave the way for reconstructing human prehistory
    in other parts of the world, using the legacy of our past that is
    documented in our languages," said Quentin Atkinson, lead researcher
    of the study. "It allows us to place these language family trees on
    a map in space and time and play out histories over the landscape."

    Mr Atkinson added, however, that the research was overshadowed by the
    "tragedy" that more than half the world's languages were on the brink
    of extinction.

    "That's a huge loss of knowledge for science and the arts - a language
    diversity crisis to rival the current species diversity crisis,"
    he said.

    While the findings make a strong case for the Anatolian hypothesis,
    some members of the linguistic community are likely to remain
    unconvinced.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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