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Author Topic: Language Spread Rates and Prehistoric American Migration Rates  (Read 1807 times)
trehinp
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« on: January 05, 2009, 06:07:38 AM »

Another interesting way to look at the American population migration during the Palaeolithic period.

Language Spread Rates and Prehistoric American Migration Rates
Johanna Nichols
CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY Volume 49, Number 6, December 2008
© 2008 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved.
0011-3204/2008/4906-0007$10.00
DOI: 10.1086/592436
Slavic Department 2979, 6303 Dwinelle, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A. (johanna@berkeley.edu). 22 V 08
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Spread rates for language families can be calculated from the family's range (which is generally known rather precisely) and age (which is only rarely known precisely but can often be estimated with useful accuracy). Spread rates are calculated here for a number of different language families and subfamilies in different cultural and economic contexts. Deliberate long-distance migrations, imperial conquest, and transport using wheels or sails make for very rapid spread rates. The rate of prestate, pretransport spreads depends primarily on ecology (latitude, coast vs. interior, mountains, vegetation, climate); presence versus absence of food production and movement into inhabited versus abandoned land have little impact on spread rates. This fact makes rates of recent language spreads applicable to early prehistory, where they can be used to model prehistoric colonization rates. Average rates for various ecologies are calculated for a spread from a North American entry point to the archaeological site at Monte Verde, Chile (14,500 calendar years ago). The time required gives a latest possible date for the first settlement of the Americas. Entry dates postdating the end of glaciation all require implausibly fast rates of spread.
Available ti Current Antropology subscribers or on a pay per view basis.Click here for more

Yours.

Paul
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Paul Trehin
trehinp
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« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2009, 11:20:27 AM »

Sorry Allan, the reply function to your private message doesn't work... So I answer here instead... You can contact me at paul.trehin@orange.fr if you want.

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Paul,
Looks interesting, do you have the paper?

Allan Shumaker

 Dear Alan,

Unfortunately I don't have the paper... I do not subscribe to all the palaeoXXX magazines... I wish I could afford to do it...

Yours sincerely.

Paul

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Paul Trehin
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