R. Grünthal, V. Heyd, S. Holopainen, J. Janhunen, O. Khanina, Matti Miestamo, J. Nichols, Janne Saarikivi, Kaius Sinnemäki
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Drastic demographic events triggered the Uralic spread
The widespread Uralic family offers several advantages for tracing prehistory: a firm absolute chronological
anchor point in an ancient contact episode with well-dated Indo-Iranian; other points of intersection or diagnostic
non-intersection with early Indo-European (the Late Proto-Indo-European-speaking Yamnaya culture of the western steppe, the
Afanasievo culture of the upper Yenisei, and the Fatyanovo culture of the middle Volga); lexical and morphological reconstruction
sufficient to establish critical absences of sharings and contacts. We add information on climate, linguistic geography, typology,
and cognate frequency distributions to reconstruct the Uralic origin and spread. We argue that the Uralic homeland was east of the
Urals and initially out of contact with Indo-European. The spread was rapid and without widespread shared substratal effects. We
reconstruct its cause as the interconnected reactions of early Uralic and Indo-European populations to a catastrophic climate
change episode and interregionalization opportunities which advantaged riverine hunter-fishers over herders.
期刊介绍:
Diachronica provides a forum for the presentation and discussion of information concerning all aspects of language change in any and all languages of the globe. Contributions which combine theoretical interest and philological acumen are especially welcome. Diachronica appears three times per year, publishing articles, review articles, book reviews, and a miscellanea section including notes, reports and discussions.