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Flegontov, Pavel; Altınışık, N. Ezgi; Changmai, Piya; Vajda, Edward J.; Krause, Johannes; Schiffels, Stephan (2016-09-13). "Na-Dene populations descend from the Paleo-Eskimo migration into
America".
322:Козлов, А. И.; Лисицын, Д. Д. (2008). "Происхождение, этническая история и традиционное природопользование саамов". In Козлов, А. И.; Лисицына, Д. В.; Козловой, М. А. (eds.).
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The
Ymyyakhtakh made round-bottomed ceramics with waffle and ridge prints on the outer surface. Stone and bone arrowheads, spears and
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A ceramic complex comparable to the
Ymyyakhtakh culture (typified by pottery with an admixture of wool) is also found in northern
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are richly represented. Armour plates were also used in warfare. Finds of bronze ware are frequent in the burial grounds.
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162:. The Ymyyakhtakh culture continued at least until the first centuries of our era. It was later replaced by the
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279:[Some cultural parallels between the ancient Ymyyakhtakh and the 17-19th century Yukaghirs].
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104:"... some features of the East Siberian Ymyyakhtakh culture spread amazingly quickly as far as
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After 1,700 BC, the
Ymyyakhtakh culture is believed to have spread to the east as far as the
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A. Golovnev discusses
Ymyyakhtakh culture in the context of a “circumpolar syndrome”:
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73:. From there it spread to the east and west. Individual sites were also found in
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108:. Ceramics with wafer prints are found at the Late Bronze Age monuments of the
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277:"Некоторые параллели в культурах древних ымыяхтахцев и юкагиров XVII-XIX вв"
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to the north, merging with the local substrate of the Bel'kachi culture.
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328:(in Russian). Москва: Институт Наследия, ИЛ «АрктАн-С». p. 14.
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The culture was formed by the tribes migrating from the shores of
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57:) was a Late Neolithic culture of Siberia, with a very large
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The carriers of culture are identified either with the
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132:(not to mention East Siberia and North-East Asia)."
244:Short summary of Siberian pre-history and cultures
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178:, where it was in cultural contact with the
356:The Ymyakhtakh Culture of Northeastern Asia
193:near the end of the second millennium BC.
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23:Yukaghir shaman of Siberia – 1903 photo
262:Кочевники тундры: ненцы и их фольклор.
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371:Archaeological cultures of Siberia
154:ethnic group, or perhaps with the
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325:Кольские саамы в меняющемся мире
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264:— Екатеринбург: УрО Ран, 2004
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275:Эверстов, Степан (2014).
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54:Ymyyakhtakhskaya kul'tura
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376:Prehistory of the Arctic
84:, a settlement in the
59:archaeological horizon
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219:Prehistory of Siberia
180:Eskimo–Aleut language
69:, and also along the
43:Ымыяхтахская культура
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29:Ymyyakhtakh culture
381:Prehistoric Russia
182:speakers, and the
176:Chukotka peninsula
80:It is named after
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335:978-5-86443-148-1
283:(in Russian) (15)
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16:Neolithic culture
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110:Taimyr Peninsula
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164:Ust-Mil culture
114:Yamal Peninsula
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34:ɯm-mɯ-yakh-takh
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211:Siberia portal
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126:Kola Peninsula
122:Malozemelskaya
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191:Fennoscandia
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124:tundra, the
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145:Lake Baikal
106:Scandinavia
96:Description
82:Ymyyakhtakh
365:Categories
287:2024-01-27
230:References
170:Migrations
63:Lena river
152:Yukaghirs
65:basin of
48:romanized
197:See also
138:harpoons
303:bioRxiv
256:Russian
160:Koryaks
156:Chukchi
130:Finland
67:Yakutia
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39:Russian
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128:, and
90:Russia
75:Taymyr
330:ISBN
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