According to
Vasily Radlov, among the
Paleo-Siberian inhabitants of
Central Siberia and Southern Siberia were the
Yeniseians, of whom the
Kets are considered the last remainder. The Yeniseians were followed by the Uralic
Samoyeds, who came from the northern
Ural region.
Proto-Uralic is the
unattested reconstructed language ancestral to the modern
Uralic language family. The hypothetical language is thought to have been originally spoken in a small area in about 7000–2000 BC, and expanded to give differentiated
protolanguages. Some newer research has pushed the "
Proto-Uralic homeland" east of the Ural Mountains into
Western Siberia. Polities harbouring the
Uralic peoples thrive. The shores of all Siberian lakes, which filled the depressions during the
Lacustrine period, abound in remains dating from the
Neolithic age. Countless
kurgans (
tumuli), furnaces, and other
archaeological artifacts bear witness to a dense population. Some of the earliest artifacts found in
Central Asia derive from Siberia. Large scale constructions occur as early as 6000 BC. Prehistoric settlements in remote Siberia have revealed that 8,000 years ago construction of complex defensive structures, such as the
Amnya complex, occurred with political warfare. They are the oldest fortresses in the world. Finding such ancient fortifications challenges previous understanding of early human societies. It suggests that agriculture was not the only driver for people to start building permanent settlements. Large scale backwards migrations occur with Native American populations migrating back into
Asia, settling in areas such as the
Altai Mountains several times over a span of thousands of years, earliest dated to 5500 BC. This is potentially linked to the environmental changes at the time, which remained preserved in the oral history of the
North American cultures to this day.
Na-Dené-speaking peoples finally entered North America starting around , reaching the
Pacific Northwest by , and from there migrating along the
Pacific Coast and into the interior. Linguists, anthropologists, and archeologists believe their ancestors constituted a separate migration into North America, later than the first Paleo-Indians. They migrated into Alaska and northern Canada, south along the Pacific Coast, into the interior of Canada, and south to the Great Plains and the American Southwest. Indo-European cultures, descended from
Ancient North Eurasians long ago, continue to expand Westwards from Central
Russia. It provides linguistic evidence for the geographical location of these languages around that time, agreeing with archeological evidence that Indo-European speakers were present in the Pontic-Caspian steppes by around 4500 BCE (the
Kurgan hypothesis) and that Uralic speakers may have been established in the
Pit-Comb Ware culture to their north in the fifth millennium BCE. Such words as those for "hundred", "pig", and "king" have something in common: they represent "cultural vocabulary" as opposed to "basic vocabulary". They are likely to have been acquired along with a novel number system and the domestic pig from Indo-Europeans in the south. Similarly, the Indo-Europeans themselves had acquired such words and cultural items from peoples and cultures to their south or west, including possibly their words for "ox",
*gʷou- (compare English
cow) and "grain",
*bʰars- (compare English
barley). In contrast, basic vocabulary – words such as "me", "hand", "water", and "be" – is much less readily borrowed between languages. If Indo-European and Uralic are genetically related, there should be agreements regarding basic vocabulary, with more agreements if they are closely related, fewer if they are less closely related. Indo-European cultures in Central
Asia flourish, these cultures are the:
Middle Volga culture (followed by the
Samara culture at the turn of the millennium), the contemporary
Dnieper–Donets culture. From around 5200 BC, the patriarchal Dnieper-Donets culture leaves the
Mesolithic hunter-gatherer lifestyle and begins keeping
cattle,
sheep and
goats. Other domestic animals kept included
pigs,
horses and
dogs. ==South Asia==