Craniometry of the Bronze Age steppe populations of Southern Russia and Ukraine (with reference to the Indo-European problem)
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16
PLENARY LECTURES
CRANIOMETRY OF THE BRONZE AGE STEPPE POPULATIONS OF
SOUTHERN RUSSIA AND UKRAINE (WITH REFERENCE TO
THE INDO-EUROPEAN PROBLEM)
Kozintsev Alexander
Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint-Petersburg, Russia
Archaeological and linguistic data suggest that Chalcolithic and Bronze Age inhabitants of the Russian
and Ukrainian steppes were mostly Indo-Europeans. <...> Which of the theories concerning the Indo-European
(IE) homeland – “Kurgan”, Central/Western European (СWE) or Anatolian – shows a better agreement with
the cranial evidence? <...> What can cranial data tell us about the dispersal of fi lial IE groups such as Indo-Aryans
and Iranians? <...> My database includes more than 250 male cranial series. <...> Most Early and Middle Bronze Age series (all Pit-Grave and 20 of 22 Catacomb as well as Poltavka and
Potapovka) are closer to the pooled local Chalcolithic (Sredni Stog and Khvalynsk) group than to the pooled
Chalcolithic and Bronze Age groups either from CWE or the Near East, indicating population continuity in
the steppes but, in contrast to what most EU homeland theories predict, few migrations either to or from the
steppes. <...> Exceptions are Maikop, Kemi-Oba, Tamar-Utkul, two early Catacomb, Babino, and one Sintashta
group. <...> They are closer to the pooled Near Eastern series than to the steppe Chalcolithic. <...> Three early Catacomb
groups and Babino deviate also toward the pooled CWE series. <...> A more detailed analysis reveals CWE parallels to certain Pit-Grave and Catacomb series. <...> Apart from steppe parallels, this group has a geographically remote
parallel in Central Asia – the Bronze Age Okunev group from Aimyrlyg, Tuva, which also resembles certain
Pit-Grave and Catacomb people. <...> The Aimyrlyg skeletons, like the Xinjiang mummies, possibly mark the easternmost reaches
of that migration. <...> Among the later (Early Iron Age) people, the Aimyrlyg population is very similar to European
steppe Scythians, supporting the archaeological theory of their Central Asian origin. <...> If this theory is correct,
then Scythians may have acquired their Iranian language not from their predecessors in the steppes – the
Timber-Grave people – but from an early group of Iranian migrants from Europe to Central Asia. <...> Key words: Indo-Europeans, indo-european homeland, indo-european migrations, Indo-Iranians,
Aryans, Iranians, Scythians, physical anthropology, craniometry
Contact information: Kozintsev <...>
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