Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia" in English language version.
MK in the wider sense including the Munda languages of eastern South Asia is also known as Austroasiatic.
This part of the M9 Eurasian clan migrated south once they reached the rugged and mountainous Pamir Knot region. The man who gave rise to marker M20 was possibly born in India or the Middle East. His ancestors arrived in India around 30,000 years ago and represent the earliest significant settlement of India.
The high levels of the AASI-like genetic ancestry, an unsampled basal Asian lineage that shares deep ancestry with ancestral East Asians,19 in the Adivasi could partially explain the extra allele sharing between them and populations with East Asian-related genetic ancestry.
The two main components (i.e., autochthonous South Asian and West Eurasian) of Indian genetic variation form one of the deepest splits among non-African groups, which took place when South Asian populations separated from East Asian and Andamanese populations, shortly after having separated from West Eurasian populations (Mondal et al. 2016; Narasimhan et al. 2018).
The branches predominantly associated with present-day Asian populations include the Ancient Ancestral South Indian (AASI) lineage, Australasian (AA) lineage, and East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) lineage.
A previous ancient-DNA study has suggested that the Iran_N and Steppe_EMBA groups are the best proxies for the ancient West Eurasian component in South Asians. The study also suggested that most South Asians can be modeled as a mixture of these two groups but also have Onge- and Han-related ancestries.
The research team found that the Iranian genomes represent the main ancestors of modern-day South Asians. ...the Zagros people of the Neolithic eastern Fertile Crescent that are ancestral to most modern South Asians...
A single major migration of modern humans into the continents of Asia and Sahul was strongly supported by earlier studies using mitochondrial DNA, the non-recombining portion of Y chromosomes, and autosomal SNP data [42–45]. Ancestral Ancient South Indians with no West Eurasian relatedness, East Asians, Onge (Andamanese hunter–gatherers) and Papuans all derive in a short evolutionary time from the eastward dispersal of an out-of-Africa population [46,47]
The high levels of the AASI-like genetic ancestry, an unsampled basal Asian lineage that shares deep ancestry with ancestral East Asians,19 in the Adivasi could partially explain the extra allele sharing between them and populations with East Asian-related genetic ancestry.
MK in the wider sense including the Munda languages of eastern South Asia is also known as Austroasiatic.
The research team found that the Iranian genomes represent the main ancestors of modern-day South Asians. ...the Zagros people of the Neolithic eastern Fertile Crescent that are ancestral to most modern South Asians...
The two main components (i.e., autochthonous South Asian and West Eurasian) of Indian genetic variation form one of the deepest splits among non-African groups, which took place when South Asian populations separated from East Asian and Andamanese populations, shortly after having separated from West Eurasian populations (Mondal et al. 2016; Narasimhan et al. 2018).
A previous ancient-DNA study has suggested that the Iran_N and Steppe_EMBA groups are the best proxies for the ancient West Eurasian component in South Asians. The study also suggested that most South Asians can be modeled as a mixture of these two groups but also have Onge- and Han-related ancestries.
The research team found that the Iranian genomes represent the main ancestors of modern-day South Asians. ...the Zagros people of the Neolithic eastern Fertile Crescent that are ancestral to most modern South Asians...
A single major migration of modern humans into the continents of Asia and Sahul was strongly supported by earlier studies using mitochondrial DNA, the non-recombining portion of Y chromosomes, and autosomal SNP data [42–45]. Ancestral Ancient South Indians with no West Eurasian relatedness, East Asians, Onge (Andamanese hunter–gatherers) and Papuans all derive in a short evolutionary time from the eastward dispersal of an out-of-Africa population [46,47]
The high levels of the AASI-like genetic ancestry, an unsampled basal Asian lineage that shares deep ancestry with ancestral East Asians,19 in the Adivasi could partially explain the extra allele sharing between them and populations with East Asian-related genetic ancestry.
The two main components (i.e., autochthonous South Asian and West Eurasian) of Indian genetic variation form one of the deepest splits among non-African groups, which took place when South Asian populations separated from East Asian and Andamanese populations, shortly after having separated from West Eurasian populations (Mondal et al. 2016; Narasimhan et al. 2018).
A previous ancient-DNA study has suggested that the Iran_N and Steppe_EMBA groups are the best proxies for the ancient West Eurasian component in South Asians. The study also suggested that most South Asians can be modeled as a mixture of these two groups but also have Onge- and Han-related ancestries.
The research team found that the Iranian genomes represent the main ancestors of modern-day South Asians. ...the Zagros people of the Neolithic eastern Fertile Crescent that are ancestral to most modern South Asians...
A single major migration of modern humans into the continents of Asia and Sahul was strongly supported by earlier studies using mitochondrial DNA, the non-recombining portion of Y chromosomes, and autosomal SNP data [42–45]. Ancestral Ancient South Indians with no West Eurasian relatedness, East Asians, Onge (Andamanese hunter–gatherers) and Papuans all derive in a short evolutionary time from the eastward dispersal of an out-of-Africa population [46,47]
The branches predominantly associated with present-day Asian populations include the Ancient Ancestral South Indian (AASI) lineage, Australasian (AA) lineage, and East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) lineage.
The research team found that the Iranian genomes represent the main ancestors of modern-day South Asians. ...the Zagros people of the Neolithic eastern Fertile Crescent that are ancestral to most modern South Asians...
A previous ancient-DNA study has suggested that the Iran_N and Steppe_EMBA groups are the best proxies for the ancient West Eurasian component in South Asians. The study also suggested that most South Asians can be modeled as a mixture of these two groups but also have Onge- and Han-related ancestries.
Here the analysis of genome wide data on Indian and East/Southeast Asian demonstrated their restricted distinctive ancestry in India mainly running along the foothills of Himalaya and northeastern part.
The branches predominantly associated with present-day Asian populations include the Ancient Ancestral South Indian (AASI) lineage, Australasian (AA) lineage, and East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) lineage.
A previous ancient-DNA study has suggested that the Iran_N and Steppe_EMBA groups are the best proxies for the ancient West Eurasian component in South Asians. The study also suggested that most South Asians can be modeled as a mixture of these two groups but also have Onge- and Han-related ancestries.
The high levels of the AASI-like genetic ancestry, an unsampled basal Asian lineage that shares deep ancestry with ancestral East Asians,19 in the Adivasi could partially explain the extra allele sharing between them and populations with East Asian-related genetic ancestry.