So what have scientists found and why does it point to
a much earlier migration?
Not exact matches
Though possessing many common cultural traits found also in Europe and the West, the
much closer similarities between the cultures of Iran or Persia and India have led scholars to distinguish an Indo - Iranian branch of the larger whole as having
early separated itself from the central or original Aryan
migration, perhaps moving eastward from the, as yet, not certainly located origin of the Aryan group.
The Nature team concludes it came in one of two
early waves of
migration into the continent, whereas the Science team concludes it came
much later, and was unrelated to the initial peopling.
The work complicates the human story once again,
much as the discovery of the controversial H. floresiensis — a.k.a. the hobbit — has upset
earlier and simpler views of
early human
migrations around the globe.
Theoretical models predict that
migration occurs either
early in the lives of giant planets while still embedded within the protoplanetary disk, or else
much later, once multiple planets are formed and interact, flinging some of them into the immediate vicinity of their star.
Additionally, the findings also raise questions over why modern humans seemed to have reached Asia
much before their
migration to Europe, where the
earliest such remains found are approximately 45,000 years old.
As an example, geese eat a quantity of carbohydrate laden foods in the late summer and
early fall which causes deposition of fat including a large deposition of liver fat and glycogen, however, when they begin their
migration this carb rich diet pretty
much ceases as they spend most of their day flying in
migration.
Revisionist westerns in the modern age take a
much darker view of the «white man's» participation in the
migration out west than the
earlier westerns did.
The results suggest that the
much earlier calculated arrival to southern Sweden among short - distance migrants mirrors a change in location of wintering areas, hence, connecting
migration phenology and wintering range shifts.»