Publication details

Dairying enabled Early Bronze Age Yamnaya steppe expansions

Authors

WILKIN Shevan MILLER Alicia Ventresca NEVES FERNANDES Luis Ricardo SPENGLER Robert TAYLOR William T.-T. BROWN Dorcas R. REICH David KENNETT Douglas J. CULLETON Brendan J. KUNZ Laura FORTES Claudia KITOVA Aleksandra KUZNETSOV Pavel EPIMAKHOV Andrey ZAIBERT Victor F. OUTRAM Alan K. KITOV Egor KHOKHLOV Aleksandr ANTHONY David BOIVIN Nicole

Year of publication 2021
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Nature
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Web Full text
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03798-4
Keywords Early Bronze Age; Yamnaya Culture; mobility; migration; expansion
Description During the Early Bronze Age, populations of the western Eurasian steppe expanded across an immense area of northern Eurasia. Combined archaeological and genetic evidence supports widespread Early Bronze Age population movements out of the Pontic-Caspian steppe that resulted in gene flow across vast distances, linking populations of Yamnaya pastoralists in Scandinavia with pastoral populations (known as the Afanasievo) far to the east in the Altai Mountains(1,2) and Mongolia(3). Although some models hold that this expansion was the outcome of a newly mobile pastoral economy characterized by horse traction, bulk wagon transport(4-6) and regular dietary dependence on meat and milk(5), hard evidence for these economic features has not been found. Here we draw on proteomic analysis of dental calculus from individuals from the western Eurasian steppe to demonstrate a major transition in dairying at the start of the Bronze Age. The rapid onset of ubiquitous dairying at a point in time when steppe populations are known to have begun dispersing offers critical insight into a key catalyst of steppe mobility. The identification of horse milk proteins also indicates horse domestication by the Early Bronze Age, which provides support for its role in steppe dispersals. Our results point to a potential epicentre for horse domestication in the Pontic-Caspian steppe by the third millennium bc, and offer strong support for the notion that the novel exploitation of secondary animal products was a key driver of the expansions of Eurasian steppe pastoralists by the Early Bronze Age.

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