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The Sintashta culture[a] is a Middle Bronze Age archaeological culture of the Southern Urals, [1] dated to the period c. 2200–1900 BCE. [2][3] It is the first phase of the Sintashta–Petrovka complex, [4] c. 2200 –1750 BCE. The culture is named after the Sintashta archaeological site, in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, and spreads through ...
Sintashta. Sintashta[a] is an archaeological site in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia. It is the remains of a fortified settlement dating to the Bronze Age, c. 2800 –1600 BC, [1] and is the type site of the Sintashta culture. The site has been characterised as a "fortified metallurgical industrial center." [2]
Indo-European studies. v. t. e. The Andronovo culture[a] is a collection of similar local Late Bronze Age cultures that flourished c. 2000–1150 BC, [1][2][3][4] spanning from the southern Urals to the upper Yenisei River in central Siberia. [5][6] Some researchers have preferred to term it an archaeological complex or archaeological horizon. [7]
But it was the Sintashta who spread the particular horses they had domesticated across Eurasia, the new study suggests. ... People had domesticated other animals several thousand years before ...
In archaeogenetics, the term Western Steppe Herders (WSH), or Western Steppe Pastoralists, is the name given to a distinct ancestral component first identified in individuals from the Chalcolithic steppe around the turn of the 5th millennium BC, subsequently detected in several genetically similar or directly related ancient populations ...
Indigenous people, that migrated in the prehistoric era spoke languages of the Uralic and Turkic language families, such as the Komi, Udmurts, Khants, Mansi; Samoyeds – Nenets; Tyurks – Bashkirs and Volga Tatars. The name "Uralic" derives from the fact that areas where these languages are spoken spread on both sides of the Ural Mountains.
Arkaim (Russian: Аркаим) is a fortified archaeological site, dated to c. 2150-1650 BCE, [1] belonging to the Sintashta culture, situated in the steppe of the Southern Urals, 8.2 km (5.10 mi) north-northwest of the village of Amursky and 2.3 km (1.43 mi) east-southeast of the village of Alexandrovsky in the Chelyabinsk Oblast of Russia, just north of the border with Kazakhstan. [2]
The Sintashta culture is in turn closely genetically related to the Andronovo culture, by which it was succeeded. [ h ] Many cultural similarities between the Sintashta/Andronovo culture, the Nordic Bronze Age and the people of the Rigveda have been detected.