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SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL from Interpreting mismatches between linguistic and genetic patterns among speakers of Tanimuka (Eastern Tukanoan) and Yukuna (Arawakan)

Authors :
Arias, Leonardo
Emlen, Nicholas Q.
Norder, Sietze
Julmi, Nora
Lemus Serrano, Magdalena
Chacon, Thiago
Wiegertjes, Jurriaan
Howard, Austin
Azevedo, Matheus C. B. C.
Caine, Allison
Dunn, Saskia
Stoneking, Mark
Van Gijn, Rik
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2022.

Abstract

Northwestern Amazonia is home to a great degree of linguistic diversity, and the human societies in that region are part of complex networks of interaction that predate the arrival of Europeans. This study investigates the population and language contact dynamics between two languages found within this region, Yukuna and Tanimuka, which belong to the Arawakan and Tukanoan language families, respectively. We use evidence from linguistics, ethnohistory, ethnography and population genetics to provide new insights about the contact dynamics between these and other human groups in NWA. Our results show that the interaction between these groups intensified in the last 500 years, to the point that it is difficult to differentiate between them genetically. However, this close interaction has led to more substantial contact-induced language changes in Tanimuka than in Yukuna, consistent with a scenario of language shift and asymmetrical power relations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5cbe2da75173a3f9d0b170200f849235
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.21619860