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  2. Corded Ware culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corded_Ware_culture

    The origins and dispersal of Corded Ware culture is one of the pivotal unresolved issues of the Indo-European Urheimat problem, [15] and there is a stark division between archaeologists regarding the origins of Corded Ware. The Corded Ware culture has long been regarded as Indo-European, with archaeologists seeing an influence from nomadic ...

  3. Bell Beaker culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Beaker_culture

    A closer phylogenetic relationship was observed between the Y-chromosome lineages found in early Corded Ware and Bell Beaker than in either late Corded Ware or Yamnaya and Bell Beaker. R1b-L151 was the most common Y-lineage among early Corded Ware males in Bohemia, and was ancestral to R1b-P312, the dominant Y-lineage found in Bell Beaker males ...

  4. Western Steppe Herders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Steppe_Herders

    The Y-DNA haplogroups of Western Steppe Herder males are not uniform, with the Yamnaya culture individuals mainly belonging to R1b-Z2103 with a minority of I2a2, the earlier Khvalynsk culture also with mainly R1b but also some R1a, Q1a, J, and I2a2, and the later, high WSH ancestry Corded Ware culture individuals mainly belonging to haplogroup ...

  5. Cord-marked pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cord-marked_pottery

    The term Jomon was coined by Edward S. Morse who discovered corded ware at the Omori site in 1867. [3] In Taiwan, the Fengpitou (鳳鼻頭) culture, characterized by fine red cord-marked pottery, was found in Penghu and the central and southern parts of the western side of the island, and a culture with similar pottery occupied the eastern ...

  6. Fatyanovo–Balanovo culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatyanovo–Balanovo_culture

    The Fatyanovo culture emerged at the northeastern edge of the Middle Dnieper culture between 2900 BC [1] and 2,800 BC, [2] and was probably derived from an early variant of this culture. [3] It has been described as the chronologically latest and most northeastern culture of the wider Corded Ware horizon. It traces its origins from the west and ...

  7. Funnelbeaker culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funnelbeaker_culture

    Pitted Ware culture. The Funnel (-neck-)beaker culture, in short TRB or TBK (German: Trichter (-rand-)becherkultur, Dutch: Trechterbekercultuur; Danish: Tragtbægerkultur; c. 4300–2800 BCE), was an archaeological culture in north-central Europe. It developed as a technological merger of local neolithic and mesolithic techno-complexes between ...

  8. Kurgan hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurgan_hypothesis

    The Corded Ware culture extends from the Rhine to the Volga, corresponding to the latest phase of Indo-European unity, the vast "kurganized" area disintegrating into various independent languages and cultures, still in loose contact enabling the spread of technology and early loans between the groups, except for the Anatolian and Tocharian ...

  9. Early Germanic culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Germanic_culture

    Area of the Nordic Bronze Age culture, ca 1200 BC. Early Germanic culture was the culture of the early Germanic peoples. Largely derived from a synthesis of Proto-Indo-European and indigenous Northern European elements, the Germanic culture started to exist in the Jastorf culture that developed out of the Nordic Bronze Age.