Hudson Mark J, Robbeets Martine
Eurasia3angle Research Group, Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena 07745, Germany.
Evol Hum Sci. 2020 Oct 14;2:e52. doi: 10.1017/ehs.2020.49. eCollection 2020.
While earlier research often saw Altaic as an exception to the farming/language dispersal hypothesis, recent work on millet cultivation in northeast China has led to the proposal that the West Liao basin was the Neolithic homeland of a Transeurasian language family. Here, we examine the archaeolinguistic evidence used to associate millet farming dispersals with Proto-Macro-Koreanic, analysing the identification of population movements in the archaeological record, the role of small-scale cultivation in language dispersals, and Middle-Late Neolithic demography. We conclude that the archaeological evidence is consistent with the arrival and spread of Proto-Macro-Koreanic on the peninsula in association with millet cultivation in the Middle Neolithic. This dispersal of Proto-Macro-Koreanic occurred before an apparent population crash after 3000 BC, which can probably be linked with a Late Neolithic decline affecting many regions across northern Eurasia. We suggest plague () as one possible cause of an apparently simultaneous population decline in Korea and Japan.
虽然早期研究通常将阿尔泰语系视为农耕/语言扩散假说的一个例外,但最近对中国东北地区粟作农业的研究提出,西辽河流域是一个跨欧亚语系的新石器时代发源地。在此,我们审视了用于将粟作农业扩散与原始大韩语联系起来的考古语言学证据,分析了考古记录中人口迁移的识别、小规模种植在语言扩散中的作用以及新石器时代中晚期的人口统计学。我们得出结论,考古证据与原始大韩语在新石器时代中期随着粟作农业在半岛上的到来和传播相一致。原始大韩语的这种扩散发生在公元前3000年后明显的人口崩溃之前,这可能与影响欧亚大陆北部许多地区的新石器时代晚期衰退有关。我们认为瘟疫()是朝鲜和日本人口明显同时下降的一个可能原因。