“Enhanced Integration of Multi-Disciplinary Inputs into a Narrative of an Ancient Migration…” (Genealogy 2026, 10(1), 14):
The authors used new Y-chromosome DNA data from a group of Lotli Pai Kaundinya Brahmins to build a more accurate “DNA clock,” which helps estimate when different male lineages split from one another. By doing this, they improved how biological genetics can be combined with other fields (like history and archaeology) to better trace ancient human migrations — in this case, a staged movement from the Pontic Steppe into the west coast of India. Their work shows that better genetic timing makes it easier for scientists from different disciplines to agree on when and how peoples moved in the distant past. The Pontic Steppe is the vast grassland region north of the Black Sea, stretching across present-day southern Ukraine and southwestern Russia.
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