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where pottery was made from 6200 BC to 5800 BC). Elshanka pots, dated from 6700 BC onwards, usually have simple ornaments, though some have none. They were made "of a clay-rich mud collected from the bottoms of stagnant ponds, formed by the coiling method and were baken in open fires at 450-600
232:
Lazaridis, Iosif; Haak, Wolfgang; Patterson, Nick; Anthony, David; Reich, David (2015), "Massive migration from the steppe is a source for Indo-European languages in Europe. Supplementary
Information 11. Relevance of ancient DNA to the problem of Indo-European language dispersals",
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https://www.researchgate.net/publication/360290015_Location_of_the_Uralic_proto-language_in_the_Kama_River_Valley_and_the_Uralic_speakers'_Expansion_east_and_west_with_the_'Sejma-Turbino_transcultural_phenomenon'_2200-1900_BC
80:
in the south. No signs of permanent dwellings have been found. Elshanka people appear to have been hunters and fishermen who had seasonal settlements at the confluences of rivers. Most grave goods come from such settlements.
371:"Location of the Uralic proto-language in the Kama River Valley and the Uralic speakers' Expansion east and west with the 'Sejma-Turbino transcultural phenomenon' 2200-1900 BC"
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126:(with more complex ceramic ornaments) which lasted until the 5th millennium BC. It was succeeded in the region by the better known
104:. I. Vasiliev and A. Vybornov, citing the similarity of pottery, assert that Elshanka people were the descendants of the
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The Horse, the Wheel, and
Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World
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116:. Other researchers see Elshanka ceramic industry as a local attempt at reproducing Zarzian pots.
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region in the 7th millennium BC. The sites are mostly individual graves scattered along the
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and influences from the Lower Volga region led the
Elshanka culture to be succeeded by the
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A man buried at
Lebyazhinka IV (a site usually assigned to the Elshanka culture) had the
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Elshanka is believed to be the source from which the art of pottery
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145:, reflecting a migration of Pre-PIE speakers into the Pre-
137:(2022) associates the Elshanka culture with the Pre-
149:-speaking area and thus possibly explaining the
88:(with one particularly important site being the
340:"Археология Поволжья||Каменный век"
86:spread south and westward towards the Balkans
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176:History of Central Asia, the: 4-volume set
64:The culture extended along the Volga from
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324:: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
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27:Mesolithic and Early Neolithic culture
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34:(Russian: Елшанская культура) was a
300:xn----8sbnlabhce1bwkeefm9e.xn--p1ai
173:Baumer, Christoph (18 April 2018).
205:Anthony, David W. (26 July 2010).
25:
437:Archaeological cultures in Russia
427:Archaeological cultures of Europe
383:10.24852/2587-6112.2022.2.258.277
57:. They revealed Europe's oldest
211:. Princeton University Press.
120:A rapid cooling around 6200 BC
45:that flourished in the middle
1:
405:Alternative link to free pdf:
375:Археология Евразийских степей
432:Neolithic cultures of Europe
369:Парпола, Аско (2022-04-29).
139:Proto-Indo-European language
344:www.povolzie.archeologia.ru
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108:who had been ousted from
68:in the north through the
153:linguistic parallels.
124:Middle Volga culture
350:on 23 November 2019
265:10.1038/nature14317
257:2015Natur.522..207H
452:Prehistoric Russia
97:degrees Celsius".
447:7th millennium BC
241:(7555): 207–211,
18:Yelshanka culture
16:(Redirected from
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346:. Archived from
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78:Buzuluk District
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128:Samara culture
102:Haplogroup R1b
94:Dnieper Rapids
90:Surskoy Island
38:or very early
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348:the original
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304:the original
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147:Proto-Uralic
143:Kama culture
135:Asko Parpola
132:
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110:Central Asia
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36:Subneolithic
31:
29:
151:Indo-Uralic
70:Samara Bend
421:Categories
248:1502.02783
157:References
55:Sok rivers
401:2618-9488
133:Linguist
40:Neolithic
354:1 August
320:cite web
310:1 August
283:25731166
76:and the
72:towards
274:5048219
253:Bibcode
92:in the
59:pottery
43:culture
399:
281:
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235:Nature
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51:Samara
243:arXiv
47:Volga
397:ISSN
356:2022
326:link
312:2022
279:PMID
213:ISBN
181:ISBN
53:and
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