The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)

Over the recent decade, abstracts of many thousands of folktales recorded in Europe and Asia have been added to our Electronic Catalogue of World Mythology and Folklore. Their analysis reveals systematic parallels between the traditions of Western Eurasia and America, those of the Plains Indians in...

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Published in:Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia
Main Author: Y. E. Berezkin
Other Authors: This study was a part of the Project 21-18-00232 of the Russian Science Foundation. The author thanks E.N. Duvakin, A.G. Kozintsev, and O.V. Yanshina for their corrections, ideas, and information.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: IAET SB RAS 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.archaeology.nsc.ru/jour/article/view/1459
https://doi.org/10.17746/1563-0110.2022.50.2.028-040
id ftjarchaeology:oai:oai.nsc.elpub.ru:article/1459
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia (E-Journal)
op_collection_id ftjarchaeology
language English
topic statistical methods in humanities
prehistory of Siberia
comparative mythology
Eurasian folklore
Ancient Greek mythology
spellingShingle statistical methods in humanities
prehistory of Siberia
comparative mythology
Eurasian folklore
Ancient Greek mythology
Y. E. Berezkin
The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
topic_facet statistical methods in humanities
prehistory of Siberia
comparative mythology
Eurasian folklore
Ancient Greek mythology
description Over the recent decade, abstracts of many thousands of folktales recorded in Europe and Asia have been added to our Electronic Catalogue of World Mythology and Folklore. Their analysis reveals systematic parallels between the traditions of Western Eurasia and America, those of the Plains Indians in particular. Such motifs are especially apparent in Ancient Greek mythology (Phaethon’s fall, Pasiphae and the bull, cranes attacking dwarfs, etc.). Although they have been known since the 19th century, no explanation for them could be proposed for a long time. The situation changed thanks to recent advances in Siberian paleogenetics. Before the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum, Eastern Siberian populations (Yana RHS and Malta) exhibited European affinities. By the mid-Holocene, population replacement occurred. It was not abrupt, but eventually resulted in a breakup of the initial cultural continuum spanning the Eurasian boreal zone and later extending to the New World. Many of the Western Eurasian–American motifs are episodes from stories of adventures. On the other hand, parallels between traditions of the Indo-Pacific rim of Asia and America mostly relate to motifs that are mythological in the narrow sense (etiological and cosmological), including early ones, evidently stemming from Africa. From the Hunno-Sarmatian, if not Scythian age onward, Southern Siberian and Central Asian motifs had been transferred to Western Eurasia on a large scale. Classical sources mirror an earlier stage of European mythology, hence the difference between the Ancient Greek set of motifs and that peculiar to later European traditions.
author2 This study was a part of the Project 21-18-00232 of the Russian Science Foundation. The author thanks E.N. Duvakin, A.G. Kozintsev, and O.V. Yanshina for their corrections, ideas, and information.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Y. E. Berezkin
author_facet Y. E. Berezkin
author_sort Y. E. Berezkin
title The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
title_short The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
title_full The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
title_fullStr The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
title_full_unstemmed The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics)
title_sort cultural continuum of the eurasian boreal zone and the eastern siberian wedge (based on comparative mythology and paleogenetics)
publisher IAET SB RAS
publishDate 2022
url https://journal.archaeology.nsc.ru/jour/article/view/1459
https://doi.org/10.17746/1563-0110.2022.50.2.028-040
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Arctic
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
Siberia
op_source Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia; Vol 50, No 2 (2022); 28-40
Археология, этнография и антропология Евразии; Vol 50, No 2 (2022); 28-40
1563-0110
op_relation https://journal.archaeology.nsc.ru/jour/article/view/1459/843
Adams R.N. 1975 Energy and Structure. A Theory of Social Power. Austin and London: Univ. of Texas Press.
Bäcker J. 1988 Märchen aus der Mandschurei. München: Diederichs.
Bae C.J., Douka K., Petraglia M.D. 2017 On the origin of modern humans: Asian perspectives. Science, vol. 358 (6368). doi:10.1126/science.aai9067.
Balter M. 2013 Ancient DNA links Native Americans with Europe. Science, No. 342: 408–409.
Bar-Yosef O., Belfer-Cohen A. 2013 Following Pleistocene road signs of human dispersals across Eurasia. Quaternary International, vol. 285: 30–43.
Berezkin Y.E. 2003 Southern Siberian – North American links in mythology. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 2: 94–105.
Berezkin Y. 2007 Dwarfs and cranes. Baltic Finnish mythologies in Eurasian and American perspective (70 years after Yriö Toivonen). Folklore (Tartu), No. 36: 75–96.
Berezkin Y.E. 2016a Rezultaty obrabotki dannykh o raspredelenii folklornomifologicheskikh motivov v Severnoy Azii (yuzhnoaziatskiye i amerikanskiye svyazi). Yazyki i folklor korennykh narodov Sibiri, No. 2 (31): 5–14.
Berezkin Y.E. 2016b Vostochnoslavyanskiy folklor v yevropeiskom i yevraziyskom kontekste (rezultaty statisticheskoy obrabotki dannykh). Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 31: 9–24.
Berezkin Y.E. 2018a Manifestation of worldviews in traditional narratives: Reconstruction of global tendencies in the spread and the chronology of emergence of mythological motifs. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, vol. 46 (2): 149–157.
Berezkin Y.E. 2018b Samodiyskaya kosmologiya v sibirsko-severoamerikanskom kontekste. Uralo-altayskiye issledovaniya, No. 2 (29): 18–29.
Berezkin Y.E. 2018c Sibir i Tsentralnaya Aziya kak innovatsionniy region (materialy folklora). Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 39: 33–51.
Berezkin Y. 2019 Athabaskan–Siberian folklore links: In search of Na-Dene origins. Folklore (London), vol. 130 (1): 31–47.
Berezkin E.Y. 2020a Sibirskiy folklor i yego sosedi. Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo univeriteta. Istoriya, No. 68: 89–97.
Berezkin Y.E. 2020b Vostochnoslavyanskiy folklor v yevraziyskom kontekste. Slavyanovedeniye, No. 6: 41–55.
Berezkin Y.E. 2021 Afrikanskoye naslediye v mifologii. Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 48: 91–114.
Berezkin Y.E. (In press) Nekotoriye ranniye motivy v folklore Yevropy. (In press).
Berezkin Y.E., Duvakin E.N. (s.a.) Tematicheskaya klassifi katsiya i raspredeleniye folklornomifologicheskikh motivov po arealam. Elektronniy analiticheskiy katalog. Last update January 2022. URL: http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore/berezkin
Boas F. 2002 Indian Myths and Legends from the North Pacifi c Coast of America. Vancouver: Talonbooks.
Bradshaw C., Norman K., Ulm S., Williams A.N., Clarkson C., Chadoeuf J., Lin S.C., Jacobs Z., Roberts R.G., Bird M.I., Weyrich L.S., Haberle S.G., O’Connor S., Llamas B., Cohen T.J., Friedrich T., Veth P., Leavesley M., Saltré F. 2021 Stochastic models support rapid peopling of Late Pleistocene Sahul. Nature Communications, vol. 12 (2440). doi:10.1038/S41467-021-21551-3.
Fewlass H., Talamo S., Wacker L., Hublin J.-J. 2020 A 14C chronology for the Upper Palaeolithic transition at Bacho Kiro Cave, Bulgaria. Nature Ecology & Evolution, vol. 4: 794–801.
Gakuhari T., Nakagome S., Rasmussen S., Allentoft M., Sato T., Korneliussen T., Chuinneagáin B.N. 2020 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations. Communications Biology, vol. 3 (437). doi:10.1038/s42003-020-01162-2.
Haas A. 1903 Rügensche Sagen und Märchen. Stettin: Johs. Burmeister’s Buchhandlung.
Kaifu Y., Fuhita M. 2011 Fossil record of early modern humans in East Asia. Quaternary International, vol. 248: 2–11.
Karlin A.S. 1991 Frantsuzskiye narodniye skazki. Moscow: Sov. pisatel: Olimp.
Kozintsev A.G. 2007 Scythians of the North Pontic Region: Between-group cranial variation, affi nities, and origins. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 4: 143–158.
Kozintsev A.G. 2021 Patterns in the population history of Northern Eurasia from the Mesolithic to the Early Bronze Age, based on craniometry and genetics. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, vol. 49 (4): 140–151.
Kuhn T. 2003 Struktura nauchnykh revolyutsiy. Moscow: Yermak. Massilani D., Skov L., Hajdinjak M., Gunchinsuren B., Paabo S. 2020 Denisovan ancestry and population history of early East Asians. Science, vol. 370 (6516): 579–583.
Millroth B. 1965 Lyuba. Traditional Religion of the Sukuma. Uppsala: Univ. of Uppsala.
Moreno-Mayar V.J., Vinner L., Barros Damgaad P., de, Fuente C., de la, Willersleb E. 2018 Early human dispersals within the Americas. Science, vol. 362 (6419). doi:10.1126/science.aav2621.
Morgan C., Barton L., Bettinger R., Chen F., Dongju Z. 2011 Glacial cycles and Paleolithic adaptive variability on China’s Western Loess Plateau. Antiquity, vol. 85 (328): 365–379.
O’Connell J.F., Allen J. 2015 The process, biotic impact, and global implications of the human colonization of Sahul about 47,000 years ago. Journal of Archaeological Science, vol. 56: 73–84.
Pavlova E.Y., Pitulko V.V. 2020 Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene climate changes and human habitation in the arctic Western Beringia based on revision of palaeobotanical data. Quaternary International, vol. 549: 5–25.
Pitulko V.V., Pavlova E.Y. 2020 Colonization of the Eurasian Arctic. In Encyclopedia of the World’s Biomes, vol. 2. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 374–391.
Prates L., Politis G.F., Perez S.I. 2020 Rapid radiation of humans in South America after the last glacial maximum: A radiocarbon-based study. PlosOne. 22 July. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0236023.
Shang H., Tong H., Zhang S., Chen F., Trinkaus F. 2007 An early modern human from Tianyuan Cave, Zhoukoudian, China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, vol. 104 (16): 6573–6578.
Shimkevich P.P. 1897 Obychai, poverya i predaniya goldov. Etnografi cheskoye obozreniye, vol. 34 (3): 135–147.
Shpakova E.G. 2001 Paleolithic human dental remains from Siberia. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 4: 64–76.
Shtal I.V. 1982 Epicheskiye predaniya Drevney Gretsii. Geranomakhiya. Moscow: Nauka.
Sikora M., Pitulko V., Willerslev E. 2019 The population history of northeastern Siberian since the Pleistocene. Nature, vol. 570: 182–188.
Skoglund P., Mallick S., Bortolini M., Chennagiri N., Hünemeier T., Petzl-Erler M.L., Salzano F.M., Patterson N., Reich D. 2015 Genetic evidence for two founding populations of the Americas. Nature, vol. 525: 104–108. doi:10.1038/nature14895.
Sun X., Wen S., Lu C., Zhou B., Curnoe D., Lu H., Li H., Wang W., Cheng H., Yi S., Jia X., Du P., Xu X., Lu Y., Lu Y., Zheng H., Zhang H., Sun C., Wei L., Han F., Huang J., Edwards R.L., Jin L., Li H. 2021 Ancient DNA and multimethod dating confirm the late arrival of anatomically modern humans in southern China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 118 (8). doi:10.1073/pnas.2019158118.
Sutikna T., Tocheri M., Morwood M., Saptomo E.W., Jatmiko, Awe R.D., Wasisto S., Westaway K.E., Aubert M., Li B., Zhao J., Storey M., Alloway B.W., Morley M.W., Meijer H., Bergh G., van den, Grün R., Dosseto A., Brumm A., Jungers W.L., Roberts R.G. 2016 Revised stratigraphy and chronology for Homo fl oresiensis at Liang Bua in Indonesia. Nature, vol. 532: 366–369. doi:10.1038/nature17179.
Toivonen Y.H. 1937 Pygmäen und Zugvögel. Alte kosmologische Vorstellungen. Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen, Bd. 24 (1/3): 87–126.
Turbon D., Arenas C., Cuadras C.M. 2017 Fueguian crania and the circum-Pacific rim variation. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, vol. 163 (2): 295–316.
Vasiliev S.A., Berezkin Y.E., Kozintsev A.G., Peiros I.I., Slobodin S.B., Tabarev A.V. 2015 Zaseleniye chelovekom Novogo Sveta: Opyt kompleksnogo issledovaniya. St. Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya.
Wang C., Yeh H., Reich D. 2021 Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia. Nature, vol. 591: 413–419. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03336-2.
Wei L.-H., Wang L.-X., Wen S.Q., Yan S., Canada R., Gurianov V., Huang Y., Mallick S., Biondo A., O’Leary A., Wang C., Lu Y., Zhang C., Jin L., Xu S., Li H. 2018 Paternal origin of Paleo-Indians in Siberia: Insights from Y-chromosome sequences. European Journal of Human Genetics, vol. 26: 1687–1696. doi:10.1038/s41431-018-0211-6.
Williams T.J., Collins M.B., Rodrigues K., Rink W.J., Prewitt E.R. 2018 Evidence of an early projectile point technology in North America at the Gault Site, Texas, USA. Science Advances, vol. 4 (7): 1–7. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aar5954.
op_rights Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access).
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spelling ftjarchaeology:oai:oai.nsc.elpub.ru:article/1459 2023-10-09T21:47:46+02:00 The Cultural Continuum of the Eurasian Boreal Zone and the Eastern Siberian Wedge (Based on Comparative Mythology and Paleogenetics) Y. E. Berezkin This study was a part of the Project 21-18-00232 of the Russian Science Foundation. The author thanks E.N. Duvakin, A.G. Kozintsev, and O.V. Yanshina for their corrections, ideas, and information. 2022-06-30 application/pdf https://journal.archaeology.nsc.ru/jour/article/view/1459 https://doi.org/10.17746/1563-0110.2022.50.2.028-040 eng eng IAET SB RAS https://journal.archaeology.nsc.ru/jour/article/view/1459/843 Adams R.N. 1975 Energy and Structure. A Theory of Social Power. Austin and London: Univ. of Texas Press. Bäcker J. 1988 Märchen aus der Mandschurei. München: Diederichs. Bae C.J., Douka K., Petraglia M.D. 2017 On the origin of modern humans: Asian perspectives. Science, vol. 358 (6368). doi:10.1126/science.aai9067. Balter M. 2013 Ancient DNA links Native Americans with Europe. Science, No. 342: 408–409. Bar-Yosef O., Belfer-Cohen A. 2013 Following Pleistocene road signs of human dispersals across Eurasia. Quaternary International, vol. 285: 30–43. Berezkin Y.E. 2003 Southern Siberian – North American links in mythology. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 2: 94–105. Berezkin Y. 2007 Dwarfs and cranes. Baltic Finnish mythologies in Eurasian and American perspective (70 years after Yriö Toivonen). Folklore (Tartu), No. 36: 75–96. Berezkin Y.E. 2016a Rezultaty obrabotki dannykh o raspredelenii folklornomifologicheskikh motivov v Severnoy Azii (yuzhnoaziatskiye i amerikanskiye svyazi). Yazyki i folklor korennykh narodov Sibiri, No. 2 (31): 5–14. Berezkin Y.E. 2016b Vostochnoslavyanskiy folklor v yevropeiskom i yevraziyskom kontekste (rezultaty statisticheskoy obrabotki dannykh). Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 31: 9–24. Berezkin Y.E. 2018a Manifestation of worldviews in traditional narratives: Reconstruction of global tendencies in the spread and the chronology of emergence of mythological motifs. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, vol. 46 (2): 149–157. Berezkin Y.E. 2018b Samodiyskaya kosmologiya v sibirsko-severoamerikanskom kontekste. Uralo-altayskiye issledovaniya, No. 2 (29): 18–29. Berezkin Y.E. 2018c Sibir i Tsentralnaya Aziya kak innovatsionniy region (materialy folklora). Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 39: 33–51. Berezkin Y. 2019 Athabaskan–Siberian folklore links: In search of Na-Dene origins. Folklore (London), vol. 130 (1): 31–47. Berezkin E.Y. 2020a Sibirskiy folklor i yego sosedi. Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo univeriteta. Istoriya, No. 68: 89–97. Berezkin Y.E. 2020b Vostochnoslavyanskiy folklor v yevraziyskom kontekste. Slavyanovedeniye, No. 6: 41–55. Berezkin Y.E. 2021 Afrikanskoye naslediye v mifologii. Antropologicheskiy Forum, No. 48: 91–114. Berezkin Y.E. (In press) Nekotoriye ranniye motivy v folklore Yevropy. (In press). Berezkin Y.E., Duvakin E.N. (s.a.) Tematicheskaya klassifi katsiya i raspredeleniye folklornomifologicheskikh motivov po arealam. Elektronniy analiticheskiy katalog. Last update January 2022. URL: http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore/berezkin Boas F. 2002 Indian Myths and Legends from the North Pacifi c Coast of America. Vancouver: Talonbooks. Bradshaw C., Norman K., Ulm S., Williams A.N., Clarkson C., Chadoeuf J., Lin S.C., Jacobs Z., Roberts R.G., Bird M.I., Weyrich L.S., Haberle S.G., O’Connor S., Llamas B., Cohen T.J., Friedrich T., Veth P., Leavesley M., Saltré F. 2021 Stochastic models support rapid peopling of Late Pleistocene Sahul. Nature Communications, vol. 12 (2440). doi:10.1038/S41467-021-21551-3. Fewlass H., Talamo S., Wacker L., Hublin J.-J. 2020 A 14C chronology for the Upper Palaeolithic transition at Bacho Kiro Cave, Bulgaria. Nature Ecology & Evolution, vol. 4: 794–801. Gakuhari T., Nakagome S., Rasmussen S., Allentoft M., Sato T., Korneliussen T., Chuinneagáin B.N. 2020 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations. Communications Biology, vol. 3 (437). doi:10.1038/s42003-020-01162-2. Haas A. 1903 Rügensche Sagen und Märchen. Stettin: Johs. Burmeister’s Buchhandlung. Kaifu Y., Fuhita M. 2011 Fossil record of early modern humans in East Asia. Quaternary International, vol. 248: 2–11. Karlin A.S. 1991 Frantsuzskiye narodniye skazki. Moscow: Sov. pisatel: Olimp. Kozintsev A.G. 2007 Scythians of the North Pontic Region: Between-group cranial variation, affi nities, and origins. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 4: 143–158. Kozintsev A.G. 2021 Patterns in the population history of Northern Eurasia from the Mesolithic to the Early Bronze Age, based on craniometry and genetics. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, vol. 49 (4): 140–151. Kuhn T. 2003 Struktura nauchnykh revolyutsiy. Moscow: Yermak. Massilani D., Skov L., Hajdinjak M., Gunchinsuren B., Paabo S. 2020 Denisovan ancestry and population history of early East Asians. Science, vol. 370 (6516): 579–583. Millroth B. 1965 Lyuba. Traditional Religion of the Sukuma. Uppsala: Univ. of Uppsala. Moreno-Mayar V.J., Vinner L., Barros Damgaad P., de, Fuente C., de la, Willersleb E. 2018 Early human dispersals within the Americas. Science, vol. 362 (6419). doi:10.1126/science.aav2621. Morgan C., Barton L., Bettinger R., Chen F., Dongju Z. 2011 Glacial cycles and Paleolithic adaptive variability on China’s Western Loess Plateau. Antiquity, vol. 85 (328): 365–379. O’Connell J.F., Allen J. 2015 The process, biotic impact, and global implications of the human colonization of Sahul about 47,000 years ago. Journal of Archaeological Science, vol. 56: 73–84. Pavlova E.Y., Pitulko V.V. 2020 Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene climate changes and human habitation in the arctic Western Beringia based on revision of palaeobotanical data. Quaternary International, vol. 549: 5–25. Pitulko V.V., Pavlova E.Y. 2020 Colonization of the Eurasian Arctic. In Encyclopedia of the World’s Biomes, vol. 2. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 374–391. Prates L., Politis G.F., Perez S.I. 2020 Rapid radiation of humans in South America after the last glacial maximum: A radiocarbon-based study. PlosOne. 22 July. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0236023. Shang H., Tong H., Zhang S., Chen F., Trinkaus F. 2007 An early modern human from Tianyuan Cave, Zhoukoudian, China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, vol. 104 (16): 6573–6578. Shimkevich P.P. 1897 Obychai, poverya i predaniya goldov. Etnografi cheskoye obozreniye, vol. 34 (3): 135–147. Shpakova E.G. 2001 Paleolithic human dental remains from Siberia. Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, No. 4: 64–76. Shtal I.V. 1982 Epicheskiye predaniya Drevney Gretsii. Geranomakhiya. Moscow: Nauka. Sikora M., Pitulko V., Willerslev E. 2019 The population history of northeastern Siberian since the Pleistocene. Nature, vol. 570: 182–188. Skoglund P., Mallick S., Bortolini M., Chennagiri N., Hünemeier T., Petzl-Erler M.L., Salzano F.M., Patterson N., Reich D. 2015 Genetic evidence for two founding populations of the Americas. Nature, vol. 525: 104–108. doi:10.1038/nature14895. Sun X., Wen S., Lu C., Zhou B., Curnoe D., Lu H., Li H., Wang W., Cheng H., Yi S., Jia X., Du P., Xu X., Lu Y., Lu Y., Zheng H., Zhang H., Sun C., Wei L., Han F., Huang J., Edwards R.L., Jin L., Li H. 2021 Ancient DNA and multimethod dating confirm the late arrival of anatomically modern humans in southern China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 118 (8). doi:10.1073/pnas.2019158118. Sutikna T., Tocheri M., Morwood M., Saptomo E.W., Jatmiko, Awe R.D., Wasisto S., Westaway K.E., Aubert M., Li B., Zhao J., Storey M., Alloway B.W., Morley M.W., Meijer H., Bergh G., van den, Grün R., Dosseto A., Brumm A., Jungers W.L., Roberts R.G. 2016 Revised stratigraphy and chronology for Homo fl oresiensis at Liang Bua in Indonesia. Nature, vol. 532: 366–369. doi:10.1038/nature17179. Toivonen Y.H. 1937 Pygmäen und Zugvögel. Alte kosmologische Vorstellungen. Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen, Bd. 24 (1/3): 87–126. Turbon D., Arenas C., Cuadras C.M. 2017 Fueguian crania and the circum-Pacific rim variation. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, vol. 163 (2): 295–316. Vasiliev S.A., Berezkin Y.E., Kozintsev A.G., Peiros I.I., Slobodin S.B., Tabarev A.V. 2015 Zaseleniye chelovekom Novogo Sveta: Opyt kompleksnogo issledovaniya. St. Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya. Wang C., Yeh H., Reich D. 2021 Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia. Nature, vol. 591: 413–419. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03336-2. Wei L.-H., Wang L.-X., Wen S.Q., Yan S., Canada R., Gurianov V., Huang Y., Mallick S., Biondo A., O’Leary A., Wang C., Lu Y., Zhang C., Jin L., Xu S., Li H. 2018 Paternal origin of Paleo-Indians in Siberia: Insights from Y-chromosome sequences. European Journal of Human Genetics, vol. 26: 1687–1696. doi:10.1038/s41431-018-0211-6. Williams T.J., Collins M.B., Rodrigues K., Rink W.J., Prewitt E.R. 2018 Evidence of an early projectile point technology in North America at the Gault Site, Texas, USA. Science Advances, vol. 4 (7): 1–7. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aar5954. Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access). Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia; Vol 50, No 2 (2022); 28-40 Археология, этнография и антропология Евразии; Vol 50, No 2 (2022); 28-40 1563-0110 statistical methods in humanities prehistory of Siberia comparative mythology Eurasian folklore Ancient Greek mythology info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2022 ftjarchaeology https://doi.org/10.17746/1563-0110.2022.50.2.028-04010.1126/science.aai906710.1038/S41467-021-21551-310.1038/s42003-020-01162-210.1126/science.aav262110.1371/journal.pone.023602310.1038/nature1489510.1073/pnas.201915811810.1038/nature1717910.1038/s41586-0 2023-09-10T20:01:29Z Over the recent decade, abstracts of many thousands of folktales recorded in Europe and Asia have been added to our Electronic Catalogue of World Mythology and Folklore. Their analysis reveals systematic parallels between the traditions of Western Eurasia and America, those of the Plains Indians in particular. Such motifs are especially apparent in Ancient Greek mythology (Phaethon’s fall, Pasiphae and the bull, cranes attacking dwarfs, etc.). Although they have been known since the 19th century, no explanation for them could be proposed for a long time. The situation changed thanks to recent advances in Siberian paleogenetics. Before the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum, Eastern Siberian populations (Yana RHS and Malta) exhibited European affinities. By the mid-Holocene, population replacement occurred. It was not abrupt, but eventually resulted in a breakup of the initial cultural continuum spanning the Eurasian boreal zone and later extending to the New World. Many of the Western Eurasian–American motifs are episodes from stories of adventures. On the other hand, parallels between traditions of the Indo-Pacific rim of Asia and America mostly relate to motifs that are mythological in the narrow sense (etiological and cosmological), including early ones, evidently stemming from Africa. From the Hunno-Sarmatian, if not Scythian age onward, Southern Siberian and Central Asian motifs had been transferred to Western Eurasia on a large scale. Classical sources mirror an earlier stage of European mythology, hence the difference between the Ancient Greek set of motifs and that peculiar to later European traditions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Siberia Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia (E-Journal) Pacific Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia 50 2 28 40