tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8428469683363506883.post9008937971168215393..comments2024-02-16T22:11:47.295-08:00Comments on Arame's anthro blog: An important paper about Eneolithic Khvalynsk cultureAramhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05717857095182763668noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8428469683363506883.post-76038978262565453982022-05-19T14:25:56.866-07:002022-05-19T14:25:56.866-07:00The presence of J1-CTS1026 in Khvalynsk in my opin...The presence of J1-CTS1026 in Khvalynsk in my opinion makes the idea of Anatolian Y-DNA other than R1b or R1a not so egregious, even the absence of Steppe admixture.<br /><br />I think a possible candidate for Anatolian Y-DNA is J1-Z1828, which was found in Isparta in west Anatolia, in a period where Anatolian languages should have been spoken and diversifying.<br /><br />Hittite speakers may have originated east of lake Van, see:<br /><br />https://www.academia.edu/10682326/The_Eastern_Hittites_in_the_South_and_East_of_the_Armenian_Highland_Aramazd_Armenian_Journal_of_Near_Eastern_Studies_IV_1_2009_63_72Prometheushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05304659196372844965noreply@blogger.com