Archaeological and archaeogenetic evidence points to the Pontic-Caspian steppe zone between the Caucasus and the Black Sea as the crucible from which the earliest steppe pastoralist societies arose and spread, ultimately influencing populations from Europe to Inner Asia. However, little is known about their economic foundations and the factors that may have contributed to their extensive mobility. Here, we investigate dietary proteins within the dental calculus proteomes of 45 individuals spanning the Neolithic to Greco-Roman periods in the Pontic-Caspian Steppe and neighbouring South Caucasus, Oka-Volga-Don and East Urals regions. We find that sheep dairying accompanies the earliest forms of Eneolithic pastoralism in the North Caucasus. Du...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...
While classic models for the emergence of pastoral groups in Inner Asia describe mounted, horse-born...
Since their domestication in the Mediterranean zone of Southwest Asia in the eighth millennium BC, s...
Archaeological and archaeogenetic evidence points to the Pontic-Caspian steppe zone between the Cauc...
During the Early Bronze Age, populations of the western Eurasian steppe expanded across an immense a...
Since the Bronze Age, pastoralism has been a dominant subsistence mode on the Western steppe, but th...
Dairy pastoralism is integral to contemporary and past lifeways on the eastern Eurasian steppe, faci...
The initial movement of herders and livestock into the eastern steppe is of great interest, as this ...
The initial movement of herders and livestock into the eastern steppe is of great interest, as this ...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...
While classic models for the emergence of pastoral groups in Inner Asia describe mounted, horse-born...
Since their domestication in the Mediterranean zone of Southwest Asia in the eighth millennium BC, s...
Archaeological and archaeogenetic evidence points to the Pontic-Caspian steppe zone between the Cauc...
During the Early Bronze Age, populations of the western Eurasian steppe expanded across an immense a...
Since the Bronze Age, pastoralism has been a dominant subsistence mode on the Western steppe, but th...
Dairy pastoralism is integral to contemporary and past lifeways on the eastern Eurasian steppe, faci...
The initial movement of herders and livestock into the eastern steppe is of great interest, as this ...
The initial movement of herders and livestock into the eastern steppe is of great interest, as this ...
The flanks of the Caucasus Mountains and the steppe landscape to their north offered highly producti...
While classic models for the emergence of pastoral groups in Inner Asia describe mounted, horse-born...
Since their domestication in the Mediterranean zone of Southwest Asia in the eighth millennium BC, s...