By NICHOLAS WADE
Biologists using tools developed for drawing evolutionary family trees
say that they have solved a longstanding problem in archaeology: the
origin of the Indo-European family of languages.
The family includes English and most other European languages, as well
as Persian, Hindi and many others. Despite the importance of the
languages, specialists have long disagreed about their origin.
Linguists believe that the first speakers of the mother tongue, known as
proto-Indo-European, were chariot-driving pastoralists who burst out of
their homeland on the steppes above the Black Sea about 4,000 years ago
and conquered Europe and Asia. A rival theory holds that, to the
contrary, the first Indo-European speakers were peaceable farmers in
Anatolia, now Turkey, about 9,000 years ago, who disseminated their
language by the hoe, not the sword.
The new entrant to the debate is an evolutionary biologist, Quentin
Atkinson of the University of Auckland in New Zealand. He and colleagues
have taken the existing vocabulary and geographical range of 103
Indo-European languages and computationally walked them back in time and
place to their statistically most likely origin.
The result, they announced in Thursday’s issue of the journal Science,
is that “we found decisive support for an Anatolian origin over a
steppe origin.” Both the timing and the root of the tree of
Indo-European languages “fit with an agricultural expansion from
Anatolia beginning 8,000 to 9,500 years ago,” they report.
But despite its advanced statistical methods, their study may not convince everyone.
The researchers started with a menu of vocabulary items that are known
to be resistant to linguistic change, like pronouns, parts of the body
and family relations, and compared them with the inferred ancestral word
in proto-Indo-European. Words that have a clear line of descent from
the same ancestral word are known as cognates. Thus “mother,” “mutter”
(German), “mat’ ” (Russian), “madar” (Persian), “matka” (Polish) and
“mater” (Latin) are all cognates derived from the proto-Indo-European
word “mehter.”
Dr. Atkinson and his colleagues then scored each set of words on the
vocabulary menu for the 103 languages. In languages where the word was a
cognate, the researchers assigned it a score of 1; in those where the
cognate had been replaced with an unrelated word, it was scored 0. Each
language could thus be represented by a string of 1’s and 0’s, and the
researchers could compute the most likely family tree showing the
relationships among the 103 languages.
A computer was then supplied with known dates of language splits.
Romanian and other Romance languages, for instance, started to diverge
from Latin after A.D. 270, when Roman troops pulled back from the Roman
province of Dacia. Applying those dates to a few branches in its tree,
the computer was able to estimate dates for all the rest.
The computer was also given geographical information about the present
range of each language and told to work out the likeliest pathways of
distribution from an origin, given the probable family tree of descent.
The calculation pointed to Anatolia, particularly a lozenge-shaped area
in what is now southern Turkey, as the most plausible origin — a region
that had also been proposed as the origin of Indo-European by the
archaeologist Colin Renfrew, in 1987, because it was the source from
which agriculture spread to Europe.
Dr. Atkinson’s work has integrated a large amount of information with a
computational method that has proved successful in evolutionary studies.
But his results may not sway supporters of the rival theory, who
believe the Indo-European languages were spread some 5,000 years later
by warlike pastoralists who conquered Europe and India from the Black
Sea steppe.
A key piece of their evidence is that proto-Indo-European had a
vocabulary for chariots and wagons that included words for “wheel,”
“axle,” “harness-pole” and “to go or convey in a vehicle.” These words
have numerous descendants in the Indo-European daughter languages. So
Indo-European itself cannot have fragmented into those daughter
languages, historical linguists argue, before the invention of chariots
and wagons, the earliest known examples of which date to 3500 B.C. This
would rule out any connection between Indo-European and the spread of
agriculture from Anatolia, which occurred much earlier.
“I see the wheeled-vehicle evidence as a trump card over any
evolutionary tree,” said David Anthony, an archaeologist at Hartwick
College who studies Indo-European origins.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/08/24/science/0824-origins.html?smid=fb-share&_r=1&
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