Essay in Physical Anthropology, M.A. in Classical Archaeology, La Sapienza University, Rome
This essay revolves around the Mundari-speaking population of the South Asian sub-continent and the long-standing debate about their migratory paths. It shows how the debate evolved from earlier linguistics-based theories to parental markers research and how it was ultimately resolved by the introduction of ancient DNA studies.
The present paper examines a long-standing anthropological and linguistic debate concerning the origins and migratory histories of the Mundari-speaking populations of eastern and central India. Drawing on recent advances in genetic research, it shows how ancient DNA studies have not only challenged earlier linguistics-based and uniparental-marker hypotheses, but have fundamentally reframed the terms of the debate itself.
Your comprehensive resource to access detailed field notes and data from my extensive ethnographic, anthropological and historical research in Jharkhand, India.
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