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Research Publication

Novel 4400-year-old ancestral component in a tribe speaking a Dravidian language

Jaison Jeevan Sequeira, Swathy Krishna M, George van Driem et al.

5 Authors
2025-10-24 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JJ
Jaison Jeevan Sequeira
SK
Swathy Krishna M
GV
George van Driem
MS
Mohammed S. Mustak
RD
Ranajit Das
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Research has shown that the present-day population on the Indian subcontinent derives its ancestry from at least three components identified with pre-Indo-Iranian agriculturalists once inhabiting the Iranian plateau, pastoralists originating from the Pontic-Caspian steppe and ancient hunter-gatherer related to the Andamanese Islanders. The present-day Indian gene pool represents a gradient of mixtures from these three sources. However, with more sequences of ancient and modern genomes and fine structure analyses, we can expect a more complex picture of ancestry to emerge. Focusing on Dravidian linguistic groups, this study proposes a fourth putative source potentially branching from the basal Middle Eastern component that contributed to the Iranian plateau farmer related ancestry. The Elamo-Dravidian theory and the linguistic phylogeny of the Dravidian family tree provide chronological fits for the genetic findings presented here. Our findings show a correlation between the linguistic and genetic lineages in language communities speaking Dravidian languages when they are modelled together. We suggest that this source we identified in the Koraga tribe, which we shall call ‘Proto-Dravidian’ ancestry, emerged around the dawn of the Indus Valley civilisation. This ancestry is distinct from all other sources described so far, and its plausible origin not later than 4400 years ago on the region between the Iranian plateau and the Indus valley supports a Dravidian heartland before the arrival of Indo-European languages on the Indian subcontinent. Admixture analysis shows that this Proto-Dravidian ancestry is still carried by most modern inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent other than the tribal populations.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment