Dear colleagues,

A recent broadcast on Quirks and Quarks (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 
weekly broadcast on science interviewing scientists on their work) aired the 
work of scientists who found evidence of horse back riding from 5000 years ago.
Here is the link to the interview.
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/research-earliest-horse-riders-1.6782485

The work was published in the journal Science Advances. A link to the article 
is found at the link about.

Best wishes,
Brendan




On 2023-08-21 02:48, Asko Parpola via INDOLOGY wrote:
Horse was a very important game animal in the steppe region from Neolithic 
times, and it is depicted already in the Khvalynsk culture, from which the 
Yamnaya culture is derived. Horse domestication followed later - it was 
necessary for the use of  chariots first evidenced in southern Trans-Urals in 
the Sintashta culture (2000-1900 BCE), which is very likely to be 
Proto-Indo-Iranian in language. Horse is likely to have been domesticated 
earlier than this in the steppe region, and kept for meat, milk and transport 
(as a pack-animal) but so far there is no clear evidence for its use for riding 
before c. 2100 in Mesopotamia. As one of the main hunted animals, very swift 
(āśu : aśva), its name must have been present in the early predecessors of 
Proto-Indo-European.

The splendid Majkop culture (c 4000-3000 BCE) of North Caucasus appears to 
represent a fusion of steppe culture (probably Early PIE in language) and 
culture of the Caucasus and the south up to Mesopotamia. Caucasus became a 
crucial source of metal for the steppe area after invaders from the steppe had 
largely destroyed the farming cultures of  the Balkans and their metal industry 
c. 4500 BCE.

Best regards and wishes, Asko

On 21. Aug 2023, at 5.53, Hock, Hans Henrich via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote:

My initial concern is that the date and time posited for PIE does not square 
with the evidence of horse domestication and the reconstructed PIE word for 
horse, reflexes of which are found in all branches. The paper does not even 
discuss this issue.





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Brendan S. Gillon                       email: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Department of Linguistics
McGill University                       tel.:  001 514 398 4868
1085, Avenue Docteur-Penfield
Montreal, Quebec                        fax.:  001 514 398 7088
H3A 1A7  CANADA

webpage: http://webpages.mcgill.ca/staff/group3/bgillo/web/

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