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Language evolution and human history: what a difference a date makes

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2010.0378

Keywords

linguistics; glottochronology; Indo-European; Austronesian; cultural evolution

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Funding

  1. Royal Society of New Zealand

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Historical inference is at its most powerful when independent lines of evidence can be integrated into a coherent account. Dating linguistic and cultural lineages can potentially play a vital role in the integration of evidence from linguistics, anthropology, archaeology and genetics. Unfortunately, although the comparative method in historical linguistics can provide a relative chronology, it cannot provide absolute date estimates and an alternative approach, called glottochronology, is fundamentally flawed. In this paper we outline how computational phylogenetic methods can reliably estimate language divergence dates and thus help resolve long-standing debates about human prehistory ranging from the origin of the Indo-European language family to the peopling of the Pacific.

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