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Sredny Stog culture

The Sredny Stog culture (Russian: Среднесто́говская культу́ра, romanizedSrednestogovskaja kul'tura, Ukrainian: Середньостогівська культура, romanizedSerednʹostohivsʹka kulʹtura) is a pre-Kurgan archaeological culture from the 5th–4th millennia BC. It is named after the Dnieper river islet of today's Serednii Stih (Ukrainian: Середній Стіг; Russian: Средний Стог, romanizedSredny Stog), Ukraine, where it was first located.[1]

Sredny Stog culture
Geographical rangeUkraine, Russia
PeriodChalcolithic Europe
Datesc. 4500 BC – 3500 BC
Preceded byDnieper-Donets culture
Followed byCernavodă culture, Yamnaya culture, Suvorovo culture, Novodanilovka group

Distribution edit

The Sredny Stog culture was situated across the Dnieper river along its shores, with sporadic settlements to the west and east.[2]

It seems to have had contact with the agricultural Cucuteni–Trypillian culture in the west, centered in modern-day Moldova,[3][4] Romania and Ukraine,[5] and was a contemporary of the Khvalynsk culture in the north-east, located in the middle Volga region.[6]

Sites edit

One of the sites most associated with this culture is Deriivka (Ukrainian: Деріївка, Russian: Дериевка), located on the right bank of the Omelnik, a tributary of the Dnieper, and is the largest site within the Sredny Stog culture complex, being about 2,000 square metres (22,000 sq ft) in area. The Eneolithic part of the Deriivka archaeological complex includes a settlement and a cemetery. Other Sredny Stog sites include Igren-8 and Moliukhovyi Buhor (Ukrainian: Молюховий Бугор, Russian: Молюхов Бугор, romanized: Molyukhov Bugor) on the Dnieper River, as well as Oleksandriia (Ukrainian: Олександрія, Russian: Александрия, romanized: Aleksandriya) on the Oskil River in east Ukraine.

Characteristics edit

The Sredny Stog people lived rather mobile lives. This was seen in their temporary settlements, particularly their dwellings, which were simple rectilinear structures.[7]

Dmytro Telegin has divided the chronology of Sredny Stog into two distinct phases.[1] Phase I (middle 4th millennium BC, according to Telegin) included Sredny Stog complexes of the Strilcha Skelia-Sredny Stog II type that contained pottery without the corded ornament. Phase II (according to Telegin, middle 3rd millennium BC) is represented by the Sredny Stog complexes of the Deriivka-Moliukhovyi Buhor type that used corded ware pottery which may have originated there, and stone battle-axes of the type later associated with expanding Indo-European cultures to the West. Most notably, it has perhaps the earliest evidence of horse domestication), with finds suggestive of cheek-pieces (psalia). However, there is no conclusive proof that those horses were used for riding since they were mainly employed for gathering food.[8] Phase I is now dated to the middle 5th millennium BC and Phase II - to the late 5th-first half of the 4th millennium BC. Sredny Stog periodization has also undergone a revision in recent years.

Burials edit

In its three largest cemeteries, Oleksandriia (39 individuals), Igren (17) and Deriivka II (14), evidence of burial in flat graves (ground level pits) has been found.[9][10] This parallels the practice of the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture, and is in contrast with the later Yamnaya culture, which practiced tumuli burials.

In Sredny Stog culture, the deceased were laid to rest on their backs with the legs flexed. The use of ochre in the burial was practiced, as with the kurgan cultures. For this and other reasons, Yuri Rassamakin suggests that the Sredny Stog culture should be considered as a real term, with at least four distinct cultural elements co-existing inside the same geographical area.

Language edit

In the context of the modified Kurgan hypothesis of Marija Gimbutas, this pre-kurgan archaeological culture could represent the Urheimat (homeland) of the Proto-Indo-European language which others associate with the later Yamnaya culture.

It has been theorized that Cernavodă culture, together with the Sredny Stog culture, was the source of Anatolian languages and introduced them to Anatolia through the Balkans after Anatolian split from the Proto-Indo-Anatolian language, which some linguists and archaeologists place in the area of the Sredny Stog culture.[11][12][13] Other studies have suggested that the Indo-European language family may have originated not in Eastern Europe, but among West Asian populations south of the Caucasus.[14]

Guus Kroonen et al. 2022 found that the "basal Indo-European stage", also known as Indo-Anatolian or Pre-Proto-Indo-European language, largely but not totally, lacked agricultural-related vocabulary, and only the later "core Indo-European languages" saw an increase in agriculture-associated words. According to them, this fits a homeland of early core Indo-European within the westernmost Yamnaya horizon, around and west of the Dnieper, while its basal stage, Indo-Anatolian, may have originated in the Sredny Stog culture, as opposed to the eastern Yamnaya horizon. They also argue that this new data contradicts a possible earlier origin of Pre-Proto-Indo-European among agricultural societies South of the Caucasus, rather "this may support a scenario of linguistic continuity of local non-mobile herders in the Lower Dnieper region and their genetic persistence after their integration into the successive and expansive Yamnaya horizon". Furthermore the authors mention that this scenario can explain the difference in paternal haplogroup frequency between the Yamnaya and Corded Ware cultures, while both sharing similar autosomal DNA ancestry.[15]

Physical type edit

Examination of physical remains of the Sredny Stog people has determined that they were Europoid. A similar physical type prevails among the Yamnaya, who were tall and powerfully built. People of the neighboring Khvalynsk culture were less powerfully built.[a] People of the preceding Dnieper–Donets culture were even more powerfully built than the Sredny Stog and Yamnaya.[17]

Genetics edit

Mathieson et al. (2018) included a genetic analysis of a male buried at Olexandria (Ukraine) and dated to 4153-3970 calBC,[18] ascribed to the Sredny Stog culture.[19] He was found to be carrying the paternal haplogroup R1a1a1, and the maternal haplogroup H2a1a.[18] He carried about 80% Western Steppe Herder (WSH) ancestry and about 20% Early European Farmer (EEF) ancestry.[19] This Seredny Stog male was thought to be the first steppe individual found to have been carrying EEF ancestry. As a carrier of the 13910 allele, he was supposed to be the earliest individual ever examined who has had a genetic adaptation to lactase persistence.[20] However, the recent publication by David Reich Lab, October 2021, presented another date from a different sample of the same individual, 2134–1950 cal BC,[21] which could actually belong to Srubnaya culture period, as Haplotree Information Project considers this sample I6561 is from around 3650 ybp (c. 1700 BC), and belongs to Y-DNA R1a-F2597*, corresponding to R1a-Y3.[22] The WSH genetic cluster was a result of mixing between Eastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHGs) from Eastern Europe and Caucasus hunter-gatherers (CHGs). This mixing appears to have happened on the eastern Pontic–Caspian steppe starting around 5,000 BC.[19]

A preprint by Matilla et al. (2022) presented whole-genome analysis of a Sredny Stog individual, dated to 4320-4052 calBC, from the Deriivka II archaeological site in the Middle Dnieper Valley.[23] The authors conclude that a third of the genetic ancestry of the individual was derived from the local Neolithic Dnieper Valley ancestry, while the rest was of the Yamnaya-related steppe ancestry.

Another Eneolithic individual (4049-3945 calBC) carrying steppe ancestry, potentially from a Serednii Stig population, was identified at the Trypillian settlement of Kolomyitsiv Yar Tract (KYT) near Obykhiv in central Ukraine.[24] At the whole genome level, the KYT individual was close to the Yamnaya from Ukraine and Russia, without forming a clade with Yamnaya. The authors suggested that genetic ancestry of the KYT individual was plausibly derived from a proto-Yamnaya population, with admixture from Iron Gates Mesolithic.

The steppe ancestry, otherwise known as Western Steppe Herder WSH ancestry, found in the Sredny Stog culture is similar to that of the Khvalynsk culture, among whom there was no EEF admixture. Males of the Khvalynsk culture carried primarily the paternal haplogroup R1b, although a few samples of R1a, I2a2, Q1a and J have been detected. Succeeding Yamnaya males however, have been found to have carried only R1b and I2. This is similar to the males of the earlier Dnieper-Donets culture, who carried R and I only and were almost exclusively EHGs with Western Hunter-Gatherer (WHG) admixture. The results suggest, as a possible yet highly simplified scenario, that the Yamnaya emerged through mixing between EHG and WHG males, and EEF and CHG females. This implies that the leading clans of the Yamnaya were of EHG paternal origin.[20] On this basis, David W. Anthony argues that the Indo-European languages were originally spoken by EHGs.[25] Another hypothesis about the origin of the Indo-European (IE) languages links them with the Eneolithic circum-Pontic trade network and suggests the emergence of the ancestral IE tongue in the North Pontic steppe.[26]

Recent genetic research found the Yamnaya to be a result of admixture between EHGs, CHGs, Anatolian Neolithic farmers and Levantine Neolithic farmers, with the mixture happening between an EHG + CHG population (Sredny Stog-like) and a CHG-like (CHG + Anatolia Neolithic + Levant Neolithic) population with the admixture occurring around 4000BCE. [27][28][29]

Successors edit

The culture ended at around 3500 BC, when the Yamnaya culture expanded westward replacing Sredny Stog, and coming into direct contact with the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture culture in western Ukraine.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "[M]assive broad-faced proto-Europoid type is a trait of post-Mariupol’ cultures, Sredniy Stog, as well as the Pit-grave culture of the Dnieper’s left bank, the Donets, and Don. The features of this type are somewhat moderated in the western part of the steppe... All the anthropological types of the Pit-grave culture population have indigenous roots... The heir of the Neolithic Dnieper–Donets and Sredniy Stog cultures was the Pit-grave culture. Its population possessed distinct Europoid features, was tall, with massive skulls. The second component were the descendants of those buried in the Eneolithic cemetery of Khvalynsk. They are less robust."[16]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Telegin, Dmytro Yakovych (1973). Serednʹo-stogivsʹka kulʹtura epokhy midi (in Ukrainian). Kyiv, Ukraine: Naukova Dumka.
  2. ^ J. P. Mallory, In the search of Indo-Europeans, 1989 p. 198, Distribution of the Sredny Stog and Novodanilovka sites
  3. ^ "7,000 years ago, Neolithic optical art flourished – Technology & science – Science – DiscoveryNews.com". NBC News. 22 September 2008. Archived from the original on 2015-12-24.
  4. ^ Mantu, Cornelia-Magda (2000). "Cucuteni–Tripolye cultural complex: relations and synchronisms with other contemporaneous cultures from the Black Sea area". Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica. Iași, Romania: Iași University. VII: 267. OCLC 228808567. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011.
  5. ^ "Trypilian culture". Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  6. ^ Mallory, J.P., 1997. "Khvalynsk Culture", in Mallory, J.P., & Douglas Q. Adams (eds.), Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture, British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data, London and Chicago, p. 328.
  7. ^ Bailey, Douglass (2002). Balkan Prehistory: Exclusion, Incorporation and Identity. London: Routledge. pp. 258. ISBN 0415215978.
  8. ^ Fortson IV, Benjamin (2011). Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction, Second Edition. Malden, MA: John Wiley & Sons. p. 48. ISBN 9781405188951.
  9. ^ The Journal of Indo-European studies, Vol 18, p. 18
  10. ^ Рассамакін, Ю.Я. (2017). "Могильники Ігрень (Огрінь) 8 та Олександрія доби енеоліту". Археологія. 4: 26–48.
  11. ^ Kroonen, Guus; Jakob, Anthony; Palmér, Axel I.; Sluis, Paulus van; Wigman, Andrew (12 October 2022). "Indo-European cereal terminology suggests a Northwest Pontic homeland for the core Indo-European languages". PLOS ONE. 17 (10): e0275744. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1775744K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0275744. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 9555676. PMID 36223379.
  12. ^ Краткая история освоения индоевропейцами Европы (in Russian)
  13. ^ Anthony, David. The Horse, the Wheel, and Language. OCLC 1102387902.
  14. ^ Lazaridis, Iosif; Alpaslan-Roodenberg, Songül; Acar, Ayşe; Açıkkol, Ayşen; Agelarakis, Anagnostis; Aghikyan, Levon; Akyüz, Uğur; Andreeva, Desislava; Andrijašević, Gojko; Antonović, Dragana; Armit, Ian; Atmaca, Alper; Avetisyan, Pavel; Aytek, Ahmet İhsan; Bacvarov, Krum (26 August 2022). "The genetic history of the Southern Arc: A bridge between West Asia and Europe". Science. 377 (6609): eabm4247. doi:10.1126/science.abm4247. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 10064553. PMID 36007055.
  15. ^ Kroonen, Guus; Jakob, Anthony; Palmér, Axel I.; van Sluis, Paulus; Wigman, Andrew (12 October 2022). "Indo-European cereal terminology suggests a Northwest Pontic homeland for the core Indo-European languages". PLOS ONE. 17 (10): e0275744. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1775744K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0275744. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 9555676. PMID 36223379.
  16. ^ Kuzmina 2007, pp. 383–384.
  17. ^ Mallory 1991, p. 201.
  18. ^ a b Mathieson 2018.
  19. ^ a b c Anthony 2019a, pp. 16–17.
  20. ^ a b Anthony 2019b, pp. 36–37.
  21. ^ David Reich Lab, (October 2021), "Allen Ancient DNA Resource (AADR): Downloadable genotypes of present-day and ancient DNA data", (.anno file), Sample No. 5935, individual I6561.
  22. ^ Haplotree Information Project (HIP). "I6561-Aleksandria", Retrieved: 31 December 2021.
  23. ^ Mattila, Tiina M.; Svensson, Emma M.; Juras, Anna; Günther, Torsten; Kashuba, Natalija; Ala-Hulkko, Terhi; Chyleński, Maciej; McKenna, James; Pospieszny, Łukasz; Constantinescu, Mihai; Rotea, Mihai; Palincaș, Nona; Wilk, Stanisław; Czerniak, Lech; Kruk, Janusz (9 August 2023). "Genetic continuity, isolation, and gene flow in Stone Age Central and Eastern Europe". Communications Biology. 6 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1038/s42003-023-05131-3. hdl:10852/104260. ISSN 2399-3642.
  24. ^ Nikitin, Alexey G.; Videiko, Mykhailo; Patterson, Nick; Renson, Virginie; Reich, David (1 November 2022). "Interactions between Trypillian farmers and North Pontic forager-pastoralists in Eneolithic central Ukraine": 2022.10.31.514526. doi:10.1101/2022.10.31.514526. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  25. ^ Anthony 2019a, pp. 13–19.
  26. ^ Nikitin, Alexey; Ivanova, Svetlana (28 November 2022). "Long-distance exchanges along the Black Sea coast in the Eneolithic and the steppe genetic ancestry problem". doi:10.33774/coe-2022-7m315. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ Lazaridis, Iosif; Alpaslan-Roodenberg, Songül; Acar, Ayşe; Açıkkol, Ayşen; Agelarakis, Anagnostis; Aghikyan, Levon; Akyüz, Uğur; Andreeva, Desislava; Andrijašević, Gojko; Antonović, Dragana; Armit, Ian; Atmaca, Alper; Avetisyan, Pavel; Aytek, Ahmet İhsan; Bacvarov, Krum (26 August 2022). "The genetic history of the Southern Arc: A bridge between West Asia and Europe". Science. 377 (6609). doi:10.1126/science.abm4247. ISSN 0036-8075.
  28. ^ Allentoft, Morten E.; Sikora, Martin; Refoyo-Martínez, Alba; Irving-Pease, Evan K.; Fischer, Anders; Barrie, William; Ingason, Andrés; Stenderup, Jesper; Sjögren, Karl-Göran; Pearson, Alice; Sousa da Mota, Bárbara; Schulz Paulsson, Bettina; Halgren, Alma; Macleod, Ruairidh; Jørkov, Marie Louise Schjellerup (January 2024). "Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia". Nature. 625 (7994): 301–311. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06865-0. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 10781627.
  29. ^ Chintalapati, Manjusha; Patterson, Nick; Moorjani, Priya (30 May 2022). Perry, George H (ed.). "The spatiotemporal patterns of major human admixture events during the European Holocene". eLife. 11: e77625. doi:10.7554/eLife.77625. ISSN 2050-084X. PMC 9293011. PMID 35635751.

Sources edit

sredny, stog, culture, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, janu. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sredny Stog culture news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Sredny Stog culture Russian Srednesto govskaya kultu ra romanized Srednestogovskaja kul tura Ukrainian Serednostogivska kultura romanized Serednʹostohivsʹka kulʹtura is a pre Kurgan archaeological culture from the 5th 4th millennia BC It is named after the Dnieper river islet of today s Serednii Stih Ukrainian Serednij Stig Russian Srednij Stog romanized Sredny Stog Ukraine where it was first located 1 Sredny Stog cultureGeographical rangeUkraine RussiaPeriodChalcolithic EuropeDatesc 4500 BC 3500 BCPreceded byDnieper Donets cultureFollowed byCernavodă culture Yamnaya culture Suvorovo culture Novodanilovka group Contents 1 Distribution 2 Sites 3 Characteristics 4 Burials 5 Language 6 Physical type 7 Genetics 8 Successors 9 Notes 10 References 11 SourcesDistribution editThe Sredny Stog culture was situated across the Dnieper river along its shores with sporadic settlements to the west and east 2 It seems to have had contact with the agricultural Cucuteni Trypillian culture in the west centered in modern day Moldova 3 4 Romania and Ukraine 5 and was a contemporary of the Khvalynsk culture in the north east located in the middle Volga region 6 Sites editOne of the sites most associated with this culture is Deriivka Ukrainian Deriyivka Russian Derievka located on the right bank of the Omelnik a tributary of the Dnieper and is the largest site within the Sredny Stog culture complex being about 2 000 square metres 22 000 sq ft in area The Eneolithic part of the Deriivka archaeological complex includes a settlement and a cemetery Other Sredny Stog sites include Igren 8 and Moliukhovyi Buhor Ukrainian Molyuhovij Bugor Russian Molyuhov Bugor romanized Molyukhov Bugor on the Dnieper River as well as Oleksandriia Ukrainian Oleksandriya Russian Aleksandriya romanized Aleksandriya on the Oskil River in east Ukraine Characteristics editThe Sredny Stog people lived rather mobile lives This was seen in their temporary settlements particularly their dwellings which were simple rectilinear structures 7 Dmytro Telegin has divided the chronology of Sredny Stog into two distinct phases 1 Phase I middle 4th millennium BC according to Telegin included Sredny Stog complexes of the Strilcha Skelia Sredny Stog II type that contained pottery without the corded ornament Phase II according to Telegin middle 3rd millennium BC is represented by the Sredny Stog complexes of the Deriivka Moliukhovyi Buhor type that used corded ware pottery which may have originated there and stone battle axes of the type later associated with expanding Indo European cultures to the West Most notably it has perhaps the earliest evidence of horse domestication with finds suggestive of cheek pieces psalia However there is no conclusive proof that those horses were used for riding since they were mainly employed for gathering food 8 Phase I is now dated to the middle 5th millennium BC and Phase II to the late 5th first half of the 4th millennium BC Sredny Stog periodization has also undergone a revision in recent years Burials editIn its three largest cemeteries Oleksandriia 39 individuals Igren 17 and Deriivka II 14 evidence of burial in flat graves ground level pits has been found 9 10 This parallels the practice of the Cucuteni Trypillia culture and is in contrast with the later Yamnaya culture which practiced tumuli burials In Sredny Stog culture the deceased were laid to rest on their backs with the legs flexed The use of ochre in the burial was practiced as with the kurgan cultures For this and other reasons Yuri Rassamakin suggests that the Sredny Stog culture should be considered as a real term with at least four distinct cultural elements co existing inside the same geographical area Language editIn the context of the modified Kurgan hypothesis of Marija Gimbutas this pre kurgan archaeological culture could represent the Urheimat homeland of the Proto Indo European language which others associate with the later Yamnaya culture It has been theorized that Cernavodă culture together with the Sredny Stog culture was the source of Anatolian languages and introduced them to Anatolia through the Balkans after Anatolian split from the Proto Indo Anatolian language which some linguists and archaeologists place in the area of the Sredny Stog culture 11 12 13 Other studies have suggested that the Indo European language family may have originated not in Eastern Europe but among West Asian populations south of the Caucasus 14 Guus Kroonen et al 2022 found that the basal Indo European stage also known as Indo Anatolian or Pre Proto Indo European language largely but not totally lacked agricultural related vocabulary and only the later core Indo European languages saw an increase in agriculture associated words According to them this fits a homeland of early core Indo European within the westernmost Yamnaya horizon around and west of the Dnieper while its basal stage Indo Anatolian may have originated in the Sredny Stog culture as opposed to the eastern Yamnaya horizon They also argue that this new data contradicts a possible earlier origin of Pre Proto Indo European among agricultural societies South of the Caucasus rather this may support a scenario of linguistic continuity of local non mobile herders in the Lower Dnieper region and their genetic persistence after their integration into the successive and expansive Yamnaya horizon Furthermore the authors mention that this scenario can explain the difference in paternal haplogroup frequency between the Yamnaya and Corded Ware cultures while both sharing similar autosomal DNA ancestry 15 Physical type editExamination of physical remains of the Sredny Stog people has determined that they were Europoid A similar physical type prevails among the Yamnaya who were tall and powerfully built People of the neighboring Khvalynsk culture were less powerfully built a People of the preceding Dnieper Donets culture were even more powerfully built than the Sredny Stog and Yamnaya 17 Genetics editFurther information Deriivka Genetics Mathieson et al 2018 included a genetic analysis of a male buried at Olexandria Ukraine and dated to 4153 3970 calBC 18 ascribed to the Sredny Stog culture 19 He was found to be carrying the paternal haplogroup R1a1a1 and the maternal haplogroup H2a1a 18 He carried about 80 Western Steppe Herder WSH ancestry and about 20 Early European Farmer EEF ancestry 19 This Seredny Stog male was thought to be the first steppe individual found to have been carrying EEF ancestry As a carrier of the 13910 allele he was supposed to be the earliest individual ever examined who has had a genetic adaptation to lactase persistence 20 However the recent publication by David Reich Lab October 2021 presented another date from a different sample of the same individual 2134 1950 cal BC 21 which could actually belong to Srubnaya culture period as Haplotree Information Project considers this sample I6561 is from around 3650 ybp c 1700 BC and belongs to Y DNA R1a F2597 corresponding to R1a Y3 22 The WSH genetic cluster was a result of mixing between Eastern Hunter Gatherers EHGs from Eastern Europe and Caucasus hunter gatherers CHGs This mixing appears to have happened on the eastern Pontic Caspian steppe starting around 5 000 BC 19 A preprint by Matilla et al 2022 presented whole genome analysis of a Sredny Stog individual dated to 4320 4052 calBC from the Deriivka II archaeological site in the Middle Dnieper Valley 23 The authors conclude that a third of the genetic ancestry of the individual was derived from the local Neolithic Dnieper Valley ancestry while the rest was of the Yamnaya related steppe ancestry Another Eneolithic individual 4049 3945 calBC carrying steppe ancestry potentially from a Serednii Stig population was identified at the Trypillian settlement of Kolomyitsiv Yar Tract KYT near Obykhiv in central Ukraine 24 At the whole genome level the KYT individual was close to the Yamnaya from Ukraine and Russia without forming a clade with Yamnaya The authors suggested that genetic ancestry of the KYT individual was plausibly derived from a proto Yamnaya population with admixture from Iron Gates Mesolithic The steppe ancestry otherwise known as Western Steppe Herder WSH ancestry found in the Sredny Stog culture is similar to that of the Khvalynsk culture among whom there was no EEF admixture Males of the Khvalynsk culture carried primarily the paternal haplogroup R1b although a few samples of R1a I2a2 Q1a and J have been detected Succeeding Yamnaya males however have been found to have carried only R1b and I2 This is similar to the males of the earlier Dnieper Donets culture who carried R and I only and were almost exclusively EHGs with Western Hunter Gatherer WHG admixture The results suggest as a possible yet highly simplified scenario that the Yamnaya emerged through mixing between EHG and WHG males and EEF and CHG females This implies that the leading clans of the Yamnaya were of EHG paternal origin 20 On this basis David W Anthony argues that the Indo European languages were originally spoken by EHGs 25 Another hypothesis about the origin of the Indo European IE languages links them with the Eneolithic circum Pontic trade network and suggests the emergence of the ancestral IE tongue in the North Pontic steppe 26 Recent genetic research found the Yamnaya to be a result of admixture between EHGs CHGs Anatolian Neolithic farmers and Levantine Neolithic farmers with the mixture happening between an EHG CHG population Sredny Stog like and a CHG like CHG Anatolia Neolithic Levant Neolithic population with the admixture occurring around 4000BCE 27 28 29 Successors editThe culture ended at around 3500 BC when the Yamnaya culture expanded westward replacing Sredny Stog and coming into direct contact with the Cucuteni Trypillia culture culture in western Ukraine Notes edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sredny Stog culture M assive broad faced proto Europoid type is a trait of post Mariupol cultures Sredniy Stog as well as the Pit grave culture of the Dnieper s left bank the Donets and Don The features of this type are somewhat moderated in the western part of the steppe All the anthropological types of the Pit grave culture population have indigenous roots The heir of the Neolithic Dnieper Donets and Sredniy Stog cultures was the Pit grave culture Its population possessed distinct Europoid features was tall with massive skulls The second component were the descendants of those buried in the Eneolithic cemetery of Khvalynsk They are less robust 16 References edit a b Telegin Dmytro Yakovych 1973 Serednʹo stogivsʹka kulʹtura epokhy midi in Ukrainian Kyiv Ukraine Naukova Dumka J P Mallory In the search of Indo Europeans 1989 p 198 Distribution of the Sredny Stog and Novodanilovka sites 7 000 years ago Neolithic optical art flourished Technology amp science Science DiscoveryNews com NBC News 22 September 2008 Archived from the original on 2015 12 24 Mantu Cornelia Magda 2000 Cucuteni Tripolye cultural complex relations and synchronisms with other contemporaneous cultures from the Black Sea area Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica Iași Romania Iași University VII 267 OCLC 228808567 Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Trypilian culture Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Retrieved 6 April 2023 Mallory J P 1997 Khvalynsk Culture in Mallory J P amp Douglas Q Adams eds Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data London and Chicago p 328 Bailey Douglass 2002 Balkan Prehistory Exclusion Incorporation and Identity London Routledge pp 258 ISBN 0415215978 Fortson IV Benjamin 2011 Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction Second Edition Malden MA John Wiley amp Sons p 48 ISBN 9781405188951 The Journal of Indo European studies Vol 18 p 18 Rassamakin Yu Ya 2017 Mogilniki Igren Ogrin 8 ta Oleksandriya dobi eneolitu Arheologiya 4 26 48 Kroonen Guus Jakob Anthony Palmer Axel I Sluis Paulus van Wigman Andrew 12 October 2022 Indo European cereal terminology suggests a Northwest Pontic homeland for the core Indo European languages PLOS ONE 17 10 e0275744 Bibcode 2022PLoSO 1775744K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0275744 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 9555676 PMID 36223379 Kratkaya istoriya osvoeniya indoevropejcami Evropy in Russian Anthony David The Horse the Wheel and Language OCLC 1102387902 Lazaridis Iosif Alpaslan Roodenberg Songul Acar Ayse Acikkol Aysen Agelarakis Anagnostis Aghikyan Levon Akyuz Ugur Andreeva Desislava Andrijasevic Gojko Antonovic Dragana Armit Ian Atmaca Alper Avetisyan Pavel Aytek Ahmet Ihsan Bacvarov Krum 26 August 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe Science 377 6609 eabm4247 doi 10 1126 science abm4247 ISSN 0036 8075 PMC 10064553 PMID 36007055 Kroonen Guus Jakob Anthony Palmer Axel I van Sluis Paulus Wigman Andrew 12 October 2022 Indo European cereal terminology suggests a Northwest Pontic homeland for the core Indo European languages PLOS ONE 17 10 e0275744 Bibcode 2022PLoSO 1775744K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0275744 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 9555676 PMID 36223379 Kuzmina 2007 pp 383 384 Mallory 1991 p 201 a b Mathieson 2018 a b c Anthony 2019a pp 16 17 a b Anthony 2019b pp 36 37 David Reich Lab October 2021 Allen Ancient DNA Resource AADR Downloadable genotypes of present day and ancient DNA data anno file Sample No 5935 individual I6561 Haplotree Information Project HIP I6561 Aleksandria Retrieved 31 December 2021 Mattila Tiina M Svensson Emma M Juras Anna Gunther Torsten Kashuba Natalija Ala Hulkko Terhi Chylenski Maciej McKenna James Pospieszny Lukasz Constantinescu Mihai Rotea Mihai Palincaș Nona Wilk Stanislaw Czerniak Lech Kruk Janusz 9 August 2023 Genetic continuity isolation and gene flow in Stone Age Central and Eastern Europe Communications Biology 6 1 1 13 doi 10 1038 s42003 023 05131 3 hdl 10852 104260 ISSN 2399 3642 Nikitin Alexey G Videiko Mykhailo Patterson Nick Renson Virginie Reich David 1 November 2022 Interactions between Trypillian farmers and North Pontic forager pastoralists in Eneolithic central Ukraine 2022 10 31 514526 doi 10 1101 2022 10 31 514526 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Anthony 2019a pp 13 19 Nikitin Alexey Ivanova Svetlana 28 November 2022 Long distance exchanges along the Black Sea coast in the Eneolithic and the steppe genetic ancestry problem doi 10 33774 coe 2022 7m315 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lazaridis Iosif Alpaslan Roodenberg Songul Acar Ayse Acikkol Aysen Agelarakis Anagnostis Aghikyan Levon Akyuz Ugur Andreeva Desislava Andrijasevic Gojko Antonovic Dragana Armit Ian Atmaca Alper Avetisyan Pavel Aytek Ahmet Ihsan Bacvarov Krum 26 August 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe Science 377 6609 doi 10 1126 science abm4247 ISSN 0036 8075 Allentoft Morten E Sikora Martin Refoyo Martinez Alba Irving Pease Evan K Fischer Anders Barrie William Ingason Andres Stenderup Jesper Sjogren Karl Goran Pearson Alice Sousa da Mota Barbara Schulz Paulsson Bettina Halgren Alma Macleod Ruairidh Jorkov Marie Louise Schjellerup January 2024 Population genomics of post glacial western Eurasia Nature 625 7994 301 311 doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06865 0 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 10781627 Chintalapati Manjusha Patterson Nick Moorjani Priya 30 May 2022 Perry George H ed The spatiotemporal patterns of major human admixture events during the European Holocene eLife 11 e77625 doi 10 7554 eLife 77625 ISSN 2050 084X PMC 9293011 PMID 35635751 Sources editAnthony David Spring Summer 2019a Archaeology Genetics and Language in the Steppes A Comment on Bomhard Journal of Indo European Studies 47 1 2 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Anthony David W 2019b Ancient DNA Mating Networks and the Anatolian Split In Serangeli Matilde Olander Thomas eds Dispersals and Diversification Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on the Early Stages of Indo European BRILL pp 21 54 ISBN 978 9004416192 Kuzmina Elena E 2007 Mallory J P ed The Origin of the Indo Iranians BRILL ISBN 978 9004160545 Mallory J P 1991 In Search of the Indo Europeans Language Archeology and Myth Thames amp Hudson J P Mallory Sredny Stog Culture Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 Mathieson Iain 21 February 2018 The Genomic History of Southeastern Europe Nature Nature Research 555 7695 197 203 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 197M doi 10 1038 nature25778 PMC 6091220 PMID 29466330 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sredny Stog culture amp oldid 1197835746, wikipedia, 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