In a new study led by researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and the TIDE research group at the MPI of Geoanthropology, an international team of linguists and geneticists has achieved a significant breakthrough in our understanding of the origins of Indo-European, a family of languages spoken by nearly half of the world’s population
A hybrid hypothesis for the origin and spread of the Indo-European languages. The language family began to diverge from around 8100 years ago, out of a homeland immediately south of the Caucasus. One migration reached the Pontic-Caspian and Forest Steppe around 7000 years ago, and from there subsequent migrations spread into parts of Europe around 5000 years ago
A hybrid hypothesis for the origin and spread of the Indo-European languages. The language family began to diverge from around 8100 years ago, out of a homeland immediately south of the Caucasus. One migration reached the Pontic-Caspian and Forest Steppe around 7000 years ago, and from there subsequent migrations spread into parts of Europe around 5000 years ago
Members of the research team attend the 13th meeting of the Facilitative Working Group of the Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform in Bonn
A recent study published in iScience presents new insights into herding and land-use practices in the Lesser Caucasus during the Copper Age. Focusing on the high-altitude site of Yeghegis-1 in southern Armenia, the research reevaluates the long-standing views that mobile pastoralism played a central role in technological developments, resource…
New research in India challenges the idea that the Toba super-eruption caused a global volcanic winter. Instead, evidence points to unexpected regional warming.
Dr. Huber received the award for her pioneering work in biomolecular archaeology, particularly her research on the identification of organic residues in archaeological contexts.
Presented by the Johanna Mestorf Academy, the award honors young researchers who have written an excellent dissertation exploring human-environment interactions.
A new paper published in Earth-Science Reviews examines all studied responses of Ostracoda to anthropogenic environmental stresses, highlighting their benefits as indicators of human impacts on water quality and indicating areas for future implementation
Dr. Lucy Timbrell of the Human Palaeosystems group and Yosef Dosha of Addis Ababa University have been accepted as a mentor/mentee pair in the ARTEMIS programme of the Max Planck Society
A recent study published in PNAS Nexus and led by an international team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology (Germany) and the University of Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli” (Italy) in collaboration with the Parco Archeologico di Pompei, Parco Archeologico di Ostia Antica, and Sapienza University of Rome, has shed new light on infant weaning practices across the Roman Empire, revealing intriguing differences that potentially reflect the impact of settlement complexity on breastfeeding durations.