Researchers Trace Languages Of Billions Back To One Ancient Ancestor

Tuesday, May 7, 2013 - 11:30 in Paleontology & Archaeology

Where does the world live? Grecu Mihail Alin | Dreamstime.comAt the end of the last ice age, a single language fractured, until it became the languages we speak across Asia and Europe. At least 15,000 years ago, a single language started to break up. It broke into about seven different languages and, over the next 5,000 years, splintered into thousands more. Those languages became what's spoken by billions throughout Europe and Asia. The seven languages are part of a "superfamily" of Eurasiatic languages, the Guardian reports, a long-debated theory on the history of human speech. It's tough to definitively trace back words when about half of words are replaced by completely different words every 2,000 to 4,000 years, but the British team advancing the super-languages theory has already shown in another study that certain words stay the same for tens of thousands of years longer. Using a computer model...

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