reviewScienceApr 25, 2003Closed access

Farmers and Their Languages: The First Expansions

Australian National University · University of California, Los Angeles

PubMed
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Abstract

The largest movements and replacements of human populations since the end of the Ice Ages resulted from the geographically uneven rise of food production around the world. The first farming societies thereby gained great advantages over hunter-gatherer societies. But most of those resulting shifts of populations and languages are complex, controversial, or both. We discuss the main complications and specific examples involving 15 language families. Further progress will depend on interdisciplinary research that combines archaeology, crop and livestock studies, physical anthropology, genetics, and linguistics.

Citation impact

1,068
total citations
FWCI
256.69
Percentile
100%
References
61
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Agriculture
  • Livestock
  • Geography
  • Anthropology
  • Sociology
  • Ecology
  • Economic geography
  • History
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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