Authors
J Stephen Lansing, Murray P Cox, Sean S Downey, Brandon M Gabler, Brian Hallmark, Tatiana M Karafet, Peter Norquest, John W Schoenfelder, Herawati Sudoyo, Joseph C Watkins, Michael F Hammer
Publication date
2007/10/9
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
104
Issue
41
Pages
16022-16026
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Numerous studies indicate strong associations between languages and genes among human populations at the global scale, but all broader scale genetic and linguistic patterns must arise from processes originating at the community level. We examine linguistic and genetic variation in a contact zone on the eastern Indonesian island of Sumba, where Neolithic Austronesian farming communities settled and began interacting with aboriginal foraging societies ≈3,500 years ago. Phylogenetic reconstruction based on a 200-word Swadesh list sampled from 29 localities supports the hypothesis that Sumbanese languages derive from a single ancestral Austronesian language. However, the proportion of cognates (words with a common origin) traceable to Proto-Austronesian (PAn) varies among language subgroups distributed across the island. Interestingly, a positive correlation was found between the percentage of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JS Lansing, MP Cox, SS Downey, BM Gabler… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007