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Re: What features do P-I-E languages have in common?

From:David Barrow <davidab@...>
Date:Thursday, July 17, 2003, 4:46
JS Bangs wrote:

> Thomas R. Wier sikyal: > > > Quoting John Cowan <jcowan@...>: > > > > > Mark J. Reed scripsit: > > > > > > > Okay, my goal is to design a family of languages that all descend > > > > from PIE, but have been completely isolated from all other > > > > members of that family for the past few tens of millennia > > > > > > The time depth of PIE is only about 6000 years. > > > > This is by no means universally accepted, though it is the currently > > reigning orthodoxy. In particular, those who advocate an Anatolian > > Urheimat, such as Colin Renfrew, usually claim an age of somewhere > > between 7,000 and 9,000 years B.P., when agriculture was spreading > > out of Anatolia into Europe and elsewhere. One of the key pieces of > > evidence usually cited in favor of the orthodox age is the fact that > > a PIE root for "wheel" can be reconstructed, and no wheels have been > > discovered earlier than about 6,000 years B.P. > > > > (While I have no strong opinion on this, I have never gotten an > > adequate response about the existence of wheels existing in > > PreColumbian Meso-America which were used only with toys, and > > not with modes of transportation.) > > Curious--what is the inconsistency here? The wheel could easily have been > invented multiple times, and as for its failure to become important in > Meso-America, I have always heard that attributed to the lack of large > pack animals to make carts/plows worthwhile. > > Curious that that Incas never invented carts to hook up to their llamas, > though
Lack of trees to get wood from? There aren't a great deal of trees here in the mountain or on the coast of Peru. And the jungle would have been too far away for them. David Barrow