considering the scope of ancient India, present India is really the South!

Gupta ji,A_Gupta wrote:
New developments in genetics, archaelogy, ... are leading to an exciting new picture of the Indian past. They indicate that Indians are and were much more one people than previously suspected. ... (try not to mention the Aryan, Dravidian stuff at all). As per current science, humans originated in Africa, and populated the rest of the world from there. India was an important way stop in this process. Humans arrived in India, perhaps in two waves, some 70,000-50,000 years ago, and modern Indians are a result of the well-mixing of these two waves, neither of the two ancestral lineages exists any more. Instead there is are geographical gradients of these mixtures. There is no evidence of any significant arrivals in terms of numbers of people in India after 10,000 BC....
I think the man who collected up and classified the signs was one Iravatham Mahadevan who s now old and not keeping well. However he seems to have collaborated more with the IISc group than Sullivan.ramana wrote:Nileshji, Is there a collection of the Indus scripts in one location from all the sites: Mohenjadaro, Harappa, Lothal etc?
And can we start decoding using the Sullivan code?
Its amazing that even then we had vowels to make pronunciation easy!
Interesting idea and the guy's awareness of how the Indian view has been brushed aside is accurateRajeshA wrote:By Paul Kekai Manansala
A New Look at Vedic India
One thing one notices is that this whole dialogue that we are carrying out here, and which has been carried out over the last two hundred and more years on history is really between Europeans and Indians, and that too with Indians voices often emasculated. In this dialogue we discuss Central Asia, North Asia, West Asia and Europe.
However historically perhaps we have been closest with Southeast Asia. When Southeast Asia again regains the top spot as our primary region of reference, than we Indians would come of age (again).
Perhaps one reason is that scholarly research into history, culture and religion has been so become dominated by Europeans that it has blocked out all the rest. What Europeans have managed to do is to push themselves right into the middle of the spoked-wheel, such that every end of the spoke has to look for its bearings from the West and to make reference to other cultures also making recourse to works of the West. I would plead so much ignorance on my part that I am not even much aware of writers from Southeast Asia and really don't know what they have to say! Shame on me!
But Southeast Asia is the region of our cultural strategic depth, which we have not yet even started researching in full earnest.
In this context, it is a welcome sign to see a Filipino trying to understand Vedic India and trying to look for ancient cultural connections between Southeast Asia and India.
Image caption:Pottery Inscription from Thailand with Indus-like symbols, probably on South Indian Megalithic Pottery.A fragmentary pottery inscription was found during excavations conducted by the Thai Fine Arts at Phu Khao Thong in Thailand about three years ago. (Dr. Berenice Bellina of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France, sent me a photograph of the object: Figure 1)
The discovery of a Tamil-Brahmi pottery inscription of about the second century CE at the same site was reported earlier (The Hindu, July 16, 2006). One can presume that the present inscription is also from the Tamil country and belongs approximately to the same period. The two characters incised on the pottery now reported are not in the Brahmi script. They appear to be graffiti symbols of the type seen on the South Indian megalithic pottery of the Iron Age-Early Historical Period (second century BCE to third century CE).
# 3, right bottom, per Sullivan code.. appears to be (from right to left) Kan-nta-pri-an i.e. something along the lines of Kantpriya, Kantapriya, kantaprian etc.shiv wrote:
Image caption:Megalithic symbol at Sanur in Tamilnadu (extreme left) and Signs. 47 & 48 in the Indus texts at Kalibangan (right top) and Harappa (right bottom).
Ramana, I have been having some thoughts t (you guessed it, a pisko issue!) in relation to the so called Dravidian languages. I am no Dravidian language expert, but I state my views nevertheless. While the antiquity and identity of Tamil is unique, one of the reasons why Tamil gets set aside as "Dravidian" more than Kannada or Telugu might relate to the political "Dravidian" movement in Tamil Nadu from the 1950s. In terms of antiquity I think Kannada and Telugu, and Tulu as well have a really ancient past. I mention Tulu because of this link - in which the "barbarian" language in an ancient Greek play has been thought to be either Kannada or Tuluramana wrote:RajeshA,
We all are South Indians and PIE is proto-Tamil!
Rajesh. Mine is bigger. I am saying it on this forum. That means nothing. Show some scientific papers and we will study them. All this forum shorum stuff is garbageRajeshA wrote:I have been reading a bit on forumbiodiversity.com, and the latest effort by AIT-Nazis is to show that the Indian R1a1a is actually descended from the European R1a1a. The challenge they are posing is as follows:
What is interesting is the Haplogroup C (xC3). The "xC3" means "excluding C3". Now C3 is widely spread among the Mongolians, who are not that far away from the region, so it means most probably that Hg C (Y-DNA) specimen did not come from Mongolia. Now Hg C itself is considered a part of the Great Coastal Migration from Out-of-Africa all the way to Japan. In India the frequency of C is not that high, but it is available. Here is what Wikipedia says:Out of 10 human male remains assigned to the Andronovo horizon from the Krasnoyarsk region, 9 possessed the R1a Y-chromosome haplogroup and one Haplogroup C (Y-DNA)(xC3). mtDNA haplogroups of nine individuals assigned to the same Andronovo horizon and region were as follows: U4 (2 individuals), U2e, U5a1, Z, T1, T4, H, and K2b.
Actually it is too bad, that the researchers are not very specific about the subclades of R1a that they found in Andronovo.Haplogroup C seems to have come into existence shortly after SNP mutation M168 occurred for the first time, bringing the modern Haplogroup CT into existence, from which Haplogroup CF, and in turn Haplogroup C, derived. This was probably at least 60,000 years before present. Although Haplogroup C attains its highest frequencies among the indigenous populations of Mongolia, the Russian Far East, Polynesia, Australia, and at moderate frequency in the Korean Peninsula and among the Manchus, it displays high diversity among modern populations of India. It is hypothesized that Haplogroup C either originated or underwent its longest period of evolution within India or the greater South Asian coastal region. The highest diversity is observed in Southeast Asia, and its northward expansion in East Asia started approximately 40,000 years ago.
shiv saar,shiv wrote:Rajesh. Mine is bigger. I am saying it on this forum. That means nothing. Show some scientific papers and we will study them. All this forum shorum stuff is garbageRajeshA wrote:I have been reading a bit on forumbiodiversity.com, and the latest effort by AIT-Nazis is to show that the Indian R1a1a is actually descended from the European R1a1a. The challenge they are posing is as follows:
RajeshA ji, Most of these forums seem to be populated by Russian equivalents of American Rednecks....If any of the participants even had some iota of academic credibility in archeogenetics, why wouldn't they have utilized their arguments for at least a paper or book that reasons out their argument for Europe as origin of R1a1a ?RajeshA wrote:The question is why are forums important!
You are absolutely right in that if one visits the majority of these forums populated by self-proclaimed 'recreational bioinformaticians' of European / Russian origin - the OIT case seems to be totally lost. But is taking on the redneck variety all that important when the Indian argument is well-positioned in the right realms ? I am not necessarily questioning your conclusion - just trying to see if there is a proper case that can be made out for it.Just to collect in one place the various papers that confirm S. Asian origin of R1a1a: Kivisild et al. (2003), Mirabal et al. (2009), Underhill et al. (2009), Sengupta et al. (2005), Sahoo et al. (2006), Sharma et al. (2009 & 2012), and Thangaraj et al. (2010)
The only hold-outs, though evidence is weak, seem to be: Cordaux et al. (2004) & Zhao et al (2009).
Rajeshji have you seen this? I have posted this twice before on this threadRajeshA wrote:In Andronovo, some human remains were found which were genetically tested. The findings were thus, as per Wiki:
Actually it is too bad, that the researchers are not very specific about the subclades of R1a that they found in Andronovo.
However looking at the mtDNA, one would think they were of the European stock.
I have a screenshot of that page taken before a Wiki Nazi reads this and changes itSubsequent studies on ancient DNA tested the hypothesis. Skeletons from the Andronovo culture horizon (strongly supposed to be culturally Indo-Iranian) of south Siberia were tested for DNA. Of the 10 males, 9 carried Y-DNA R1a1a (M17).
These people desperately want those dead bodies to be white blonde blue eyes. Fukin losersHuman pigmentation gene SNP analysis
In order to deepen the search of the geographic origin of the
Siberian specimens under study, we typed SNPs located in
human pigmentation genes. Ten SNP markers located in
genes that have been described as accounting for variation
in human hair, eye and skin color but also in ethnogeo-
graphic ancestry were thus selected and a minisequencing-
based assay was developed on modern samples (Bouakaze
et al. 2009). This assay was subsequently applied on the
ancient Siberian samples so that complementary informa-
tion provided by phenotype-associated SNPs could add to
previous anthropological and genetic Wndings. The pheno-
type and ancestry of the ancient Siberian specimens under
study are indicated in Table 6 (genotype details for each
investigated marker is given in Bouakaze et al. 2009). Sur-
prisingly, the typing of a SNP associated to eye color
(rs12913832) shows that at least 60% (15/25) of the Sibe-
rian specimens had blue (or green) eyes (S27 cannot be
tested because bone sample and DNA extract were used
up). Moreover, the pigmentation SNP analysis showed that
all except three specimens exhibited a European ancestry,
even when they bore an Asian mtDNA haplotype as is the
case for samples S25, S26, S28, S33 and S36, demonstrat-
ing the importance of studying both maternal and paternal
lineages. These results also show that two individuals car-
rying the same mtDNA haplotype can be classiWed in oppo-
site ethnogeographic groups
Did anyone read them to understnad why they are holding out?The only hold-outs, though evidence is weak, seem to be: Cordaux et al. (2004) & Zhao et al (2009).
Fact is eye color was not tested because they did not have enough bone.venug wrote:shiv ji, it is my guess that skin color and eye color are related in a way, the cold regions could trigger a genetic mutation to take care of UV rays both in skin color and eye coloration, and as you know skin color change to white is recent ad gradation of skin color as you have pointed out a while back is from east to west because of lack of an amino acid(?).
Skin color: Mutation in gene SLC24A5venug wrote:shiv ji, it is my guess that skin color and eye color are related in a way, the cold regions could trigger a genetic mutation to take care of UV rays both in skin color and eye coloration, and as you know skin color change to white is recent ad gradation of skin color as you have pointed out a while back is from east to west because of lack of an amino acid(?).
One comment to that: They may have had in total 2 fathers, but those two fathers certainly had as many as 8 women, to produce the fellows whose bodies were tested.shiv wrote:Many of those Kurgan bodies were from one family.
They still often speak of the blond red-haired mummies from Tarim Basin!shiv wrote:What impresses me is the way Indians are accused of being jingoistic but every goddam line - be they linguists or geneticists or archaeologists - they all have this deep need to fluff up their own self pride while Indians are accused of Hindutvadis.
venug ji,venug wrote:Rajesh ji:
paperAfter Last Glacial Maximum: The third migration
Author: Narendra Katkar¹
Venug, I second what RajeshA has said. Great paper and your magically resourceful presence in extracting it and making it available here.! Thank you.RajeshA wrote:
venug ji,
it is good to have your resourcefulness on board!Thanks a lot!
the weak logic and coincident parallel is much more logical than any logic of AIT knucleheads related to horse, chariot, and languages.“If we were to use the same arithmetic and logic (sensu
haplogroup 9 is Neolithic) to give an interpretation of
this table (Table 17.3), then the straightforward suggestion
would be that both Neolithic (agriculture) and
Indo-European languages arose in India and from there,
spread to Europe” (Kivisild et al., 2003).
shiv saar,shiv wrote:Rajeshji have you seen this? I have posted this twice before on this thread
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurgan_hypothesisI have a screenshot of that page taken before a Wiki Nazi reads this and changes itSubsequent studies on ancient DNA tested the hypothesis. Skeletons from the Andronovo culture horizon (strongly supposed to be culturally Indo-Iranian) of south Siberia were tested for DNA. Of the 10 males, 9 carried Y-DNA R1a1a (M17).
Very interesting. You have moved ahead of me in identifying and placing genetic markers on populations and I take your word for it because you are on my sideRajeshA wrote:
My Kurgan hypothesis is that in that area Indians met up with East Europeans. The East Europeans may in fact have been also Indians from a few thousand years before.
The reason I say this is because of that specimen with Hg C(xC3) Y-DNA. In that area otherwise one wouldn't really find such kind of specimen, other than if he came from India. The Chenchus, Kurumbas and Santhal from India for example have Hg C (Y-DNA). You don't have any Hg C in Europe. So I think the people would have been from India. However some of the mtDNA are European. So it could have been a place where two populations mixed. Of course the specimen were in this case not first generation migrants from India.
As one sees in the map, other than C3, there really isn't any other Hg C (Y-DNA) in the neighborhood, but the Hg C (Y-DNA) found in the human remains at Andronovo were Hg C (Y-DNA) but not C3, i.e. Hg C(xC3) (Y-DNA).
If this is the case, then it also points to the fact that during Andronovo culture (1800 BCE - 1400 BCE), Indians of various Hg were already mixed, e.g. R1a1 population also had Hg C (Y-DNA) people. One would presume that C should belong to the ASI, the way it has spread, but according to the Reich et al. (2009) paper, Hg C (Y-DNA) is categorized as ANI, even though there are no Europeans (CEU) with Hg C.
Besides, don't foget the genetically driven attaction of European women for Mexican looking men!shiv wrote:RajeshA wrote: Very interesting. You have moved ahead of me in identifying and placing genetic markers on populations and I take your word for it because you are on my side. I will cross check only AIT Nazi assertions
The interesting point here is that "nation states" and national identities are a phenomenon that are very recent. Even 5000 years ago people could migrate freely and take wives/husbands/partners from new lands without being asked if they were black haired or blonde.
The Indian tribal Y DNA with European derived mtDNA suggests exactly that.
There is a series of steps that can be done to give a counter example to your claim:brihaspati wrote:peter ji,
no, it doesnt. I suggested stellarium on this thread, and I have used it for some time. When you zoom in it fixes on the point you selected, and keeps it fixed with respect to the viewing frame - which to you appears to be relative to its supposed position of rising etc. There is no position of rising as such. To see why zoomed in figure compensates for the seasonal/precessional changes - you have to magnify only to the scale that keeps both the North cardinal marker on the horizon as well as the binary within your display's frame. Then just bring up the date-time dialogue and use your cursor/mouse to roll back the years and see how the whole orientation changes when you change the years but keep month+day+time fixed.
You still dont get it that using the same Julian day and time within the year - but spaced >1000 years apart, changes the entire orientation relative not only to the virtual instantaneous north, but also the binary's own orientation changes. If you zoom in, you lose this change from view because the software rotates the sky wrt your zoom point and compensates to keep the binary within the frame at the same relative position.
If you are determined not see any changes, you will not see one anyway, hence no point in discussing perhaps.
shiv wrote:Rajeshji have you seen this? I have posted this twice before on this thread
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurgan_hypothesisI have a screenshot of that page taken before a Wiki Nazi reads this and changes itSubsequent studies on ancient DNA tested the hypothesis. Skeletons from the Andronovo culture horizon (strongly supposed to be culturally Indo-Iranian) of south Siberia were tested for DNA. Of the 10 males, 9 carried Y-DNA R1a1a (M17).
RajeshA wrote:shiv saar,
I have read it, but as far as I see it the Kurgan hypothesis was established to explain AIT. However since then there have been many developments in genetics. Many new SNPs have been found, and today haplogroups are defined to eight levels. At that time perhaps one could say that R1a1 in India and R1a1 in Europe is the same thing, but now we has to be much more specific.
European R1a1a7 found in Poland is not the same thing found in India-Iran region, so the migration does not fit the model. However even R1a1a7 was redefined in 2010, I think, as R1a1a1g. And now some things are being reconsidered again in favor of AIT. We know there is nothing to it! But AIT-Nazis would look for any straw they can find.
My Kurgan hypothesis is that in that area Indians met up with East Europeans. The East Europeans may in fact have been also Indians from a few thousand years before.
The reason I say this is because of that specimen with Hg C(xC3) Y-DNA. In that area otherwise one wouldn't really find such kind of specimen, other than if he came from India. The Chenchus, Kurumbas and Santhal from India for example have Hg C (Y-DNA). You don't have any Hg C in Europe. So I think the people would have been from India. However some of the mtDNA are European. So it could have been a place where two populations mixed. Of course the specimen were in this case not first generation migrants from India.
As one sees in the map, other than C3, there really isn't any other Hg C (Y-DNA) in the neighborhood, but the Hg C (Y-DNA) found in the human remains at Andronovo were Hg C (Y-DNA) but not C3, i.e. Hg C(xC3) (Y-DNA).
If this is the case, then it also points to the fact that during Andronovo culture (1800 BCE - 1400 BCE), Indians of various Hg were already mixed, e.g. R1a1 population also had Hg C (Y-DNA) people. One would presume that C should belong to the ASI, the way it has spread, but according to the Reich et al. (2009) paper, Hg C (Y-DNA) is categorized as ANI, even though there are no Europeans (CEU) with Hg C.
This is a fair point and often overlooked. IMHO genetics has put anthropologists out of work for precisely this reason.Virendra wrote:It is futile to conclude geographic, genetic or racial origin of people on basis of physical appearence. [..]
Very good paper. The argument of Levant and Middle East having extreme climatic conditions over most of the Ice Age is key here - and points towards India to Eastern Iran region as being the original crossroads of the world, not the Middle East as generally considered. Arguments are well presented for this region acting as refuge during the LGM and civilization having really gotten a start through the re-population of increasingly hospitable regions over last 12K years from this refuge.venug wrote:Rajesh ji:
paperAfter Last Glacial Maximum: The third migration
Author: Narendra Katkar¹