How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence

America was colonized by Asian migrants who moved from northeastern Siberia into North America, either coastally or by an interior route through now-submerged Beringia, and from there spread southward eventually to settle in the entire hemisphere. Linguistic evidence can shed light on when colonizat...

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Main Author: Nichols, J
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/94f0g00p
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt94f0g00p 2023-05-15T18:49:29+02:00 How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence Nichols, J 2015-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/94f0g00p unknown eScholarship, University of California qt94f0g00p https://escholarship.org/uc/item/94f0g00p public Basic Behavioral and Social Science Behavioral and Social Science chapter 2015 ftcdlib 2021-03-28T08:19:02Z America was colonized by Asian migrants who moved from northeastern Siberia into North America, either coastally or by an interior route through now-submerged Beringia, and from there spread southward eventually to settle in the entire hemisphere. Linguistic evidence can shed light on when colonization began; whether it was initially coastal, interior, or both; how many distinct populations were involved; and how rapidly the hemisphere was colonized. The time required to generate the historically attested number of languages and language families in the Americas can be estimated; frequencies of structural properties in areally defined linguistic populations can discriminate between populations and point to geographic origins; and attested and straightforwardly reconstructable rates of language spread can be used to estimate rates of migration and demographic spread. On the linguistic evidence, colonization must have begun before the Last Glacial Maximum. There were at least two distinct populations, perhaps corresponding to interior and coastal immigration routes, and in general, coastal immigration seems to have had a stronger and more varied impact on the linguistic population of the Americas than interior immigration did. The immigrants spread at not much over 1 km/year on average (depending on ecology), taking about 7,000 years to reach southern South America. The linguistic dates are robust and based on plentiful and carefully analyzed material, so they cannot be dismissed, although they conflict with the younger ages estimated in genetic, archaeological, and paleoclimatological work. Book Part Beringia Siberia University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Behavioral and Social Science
spellingShingle Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Behavioral and Social Science
Nichols, J
How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
topic_facet Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Behavioral and Social Science
description America was colonized by Asian migrants who moved from northeastern Siberia into North America, either coastally or by an interior route through now-submerged Beringia, and from there spread southward eventually to settle in the entire hemisphere. Linguistic evidence can shed light on when colonization began; whether it was initially coastal, interior, or both; how many distinct populations were involved; and how rapidly the hemisphere was colonized. The time required to generate the historically attested number of languages and language families in the Americas can be estimated; frequencies of structural properties in areally defined linguistic populations can discriminate between populations and point to geographic origins; and attested and straightforwardly reconstructable rates of language spread can be used to estimate rates of migration and demographic spread. On the linguistic evidence, colonization must have begun before the Last Glacial Maximum. There were at least two distinct populations, perhaps corresponding to interior and coastal immigration routes, and in general, coastal immigration seems to have had a stronger and more varied impact on the linguistic population of the Americas than interior immigration did. The immigrants spread at not much over 1 km/year on average (depending on ecology), taking about 7,000 years to reach southern South America. The linguistic dates are robust and based on plentiful and carefully analyzed material, so they cannot be dismissed, although they conflict with the younger ages estimated in genetic, archaeological, and paleoclimatological work.
format Book Part
author Nichols, J
author_facet Nichols, J
author_sort Nichols, J
title How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
title_short How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
title_full How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
title_fullStr How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
title_full_unstemmed How America was colonized: Linguistic evidence
title_sort how america was colonized: linguistic evidence
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2015
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/94f0g00p
genre Beringia
Siberia
genre_facet Beringia
Siberia
op_relation qt94f0g00p
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op_rights public
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