Language phylogenies reveal expansion pulses and pauses in Pacific settlement
- PMID: 19164742
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1166858
Language phylogenies reveal expansion pulses and pauses in Pacific settlement
Abstract
Debates about human prehistory often center on the role that population expansions play in shaping biological and cultural diversity. Hypotheses on the origin of the Austronesian settlers of the Pacific are divided between a recent "pulse-pause" expansion from Taiwan and an older "slow-boat" diffusion from Wallacea. We used lexical data and Bayesian phylogenetic methods to construct a phylogeny of 400 languages. In agreement with the pulse-pause scenario, the language trees place the Austronesian origin in Taiwan approximately 5230 years ago and reveal a series of settlement pauses and expansion pulses linked to technological and social innovations. These results are robust to assumptions about the rooting and calibration of the trees and demonstrate the combined power of linguistic scholarship, database technologies, and computational phylogenetic methods for resolving questions about human prehistory.
Comment in
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Anthropology. Where bacteria and languages concur.Science. 2009 Jan 23;323(5913):467-8. doi: 10.1126/science.1168953. Science. 2009. PMID: 19164735 No abstract available.
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Linguistics more robust than genetics.Science. 2009 Apr 24;324(5926):464-5. doi: 10.1126/science.324_464c. Science. 2009. PMID: 19390026 No abstract available.
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