Genetic evidence reveals that India and Europe share a common ancestral population from the Eurasian Steppe approximately 5,000 years ago, with the R1a Z93 Y chromosome lineage connecting North Indian Brahmins to Slavic Europeans, and the 2009 Reich Lab paper demonstrating that modern Indians are admixtures of Ancestral North Indians (ANI) and Ancestral South Indians (ASI), with ANI showing genetic affinities to Middle Eastern, Central Asian, and European populations, and the 2019 Narasimhan paper confirming that Steppe ancestry in South Asia arrived primarily through male lines, with the same genetic profile found in both Bronze Age Eastern Europe and South Asia.
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Scientists Compared Indian DNA to European DNA — The Results Shocked Everyone追加:
Picture two men, a Brahmin priest reciting Sanskrit verses on the banks of the Ganges, a farmer hauling rye at the edge of a Lithuanian forest, 5,000 km between them. Different languages, different gods, different skin, but check the Y chromosome of each and you hit the same paternal ancestor. One man, the Eurasian Steppe. About 5,000 years ago, the textbooks separated India and Europe a long time ago. DNA did not. By the end of this video, you will know the haplogroup that connects upper caste North Indians to Slavic Europeans, the 2009 Reich Lab paper that quietly reset the debate, the asymmetry the field walks around carefully because the data points somewhere uncomfortable, and there is one ancient skeleton from the Indus Valley that the field is still arguing about. That last one is the next video. There is a sentence in the 2019 Science paper, page one, the line every press release flattened.
There is a researcher named Priya Moorjani. Save the name. We are coming back to her, same source.
Two directions.
Pull up a map of the Eurasian Steppe.
The grassland corridor runs from modern Ukraine through Kazakhstan into Mongolia. 5,000 years ago, the people who lived on that corridor were not farmers. They were horse pastoralists, Yamnaya, then their descendants, the Sintashta and the Andronovo. Mobile, dairy-fed, bronze-equipped.
Roughly 5,000 years ago, a Y chromosome lineage called R1a split into two branches. One branch, R1a Z282, drifted west and took root in Eastern Europe. Today, R1a Z282 dominates the male lineages of Slavic populations across Russia, Poland, Lithuania, and the Baltics. The other branch, R1a Z93, drifted south through Central Asia and took root in the Indian subcontinent.
Today, R1a Z93 reaches frequencies of 30 to 72% in North Indian Brahmin groups and similar frequencies in Punjab and parts of Pakistan. Same source, two tributaries. The R1a marker is a single line of inheritance, the male line, the one that runs father to son. So, a Brahmin man in Varanasi and a Lithuanian man in Vilnius have a documented common paternal ancestor about 250 generations back. That alone reset a 200-year debate. But the Y chromosome is just a marker. It is a single thread. The autosomal data, the rest of the genome you carry, tells a bigger story. And the next part is where the published literature gets careful with its phrasing.
There is a 2009 paper in Nature that quietly reset the debate. It was led by David Reich, Kayatharangaj, Nick Patterson, and colleagues. The paper is titled Reconstructing Indian Population History. They sampled 132 individuals from 25 diverse Indian groups, ran a genome-wide analysis, and found something the field had been circling for decades. Modern Indians, almost without exception, are admixtures of two ancient populations. The paper named them Ancestral North Indians and Ancestral [music] South Indians, referred to as ANI and ASI. The numbers landed first. ANI ancestry ranges from 39 to 71% across most Indian groups. The Pathan and the Sindhi cluster high, while South Indian Dravidian-speaking groups cluster lower. But there is no group with zero ANI ancestry left in mainland India.
Here is the part the press releases led with and then walked back. ANI is not generic ancient. ANI is genetically close to Middle Easterners, Central Asians, and Europeans. That is the paper's exact phrasing.
The genetic distance between ANI and ASI was actually larger than the distance between any two European populations the team had data for. Read that line again.
India is genetically more diverse internally than the entire continent of Europe.
The line from the Narasimhan paper I told you about, we are getting there.
One more piece of context. The ANI ancestry was not randomly distributed across India. It was caste-stratified, [music] higher in upper castes and higher in Indo-European-speaking groups. The paper was careful with the implication. The data was not.
Caste-stratified.
Look at the Y chromosomes, then look at the mitochondrial DNA. The numbers don't match, and that's the story. By 2019, the Reich Lab and an international team led by Vagheesh Narasimhan had sequenced 523 ancient humans across South and Central Asia. The paper ran in Science, volume 365, issue 6,457.
The autosomal Steppe ancestry the team detected in modern South Asians ran up to 30%, but here's the asymmetry. The Steppe signal was not evenly distributed across the genome. It was overwhelmingly carried on the Y chromosome. In plain language, the Steppe ancestry in modern South Asians arrived primarily through male lines. Female lines from the same migration are present, but only a fraction. The migration was male-skewed at a magnitude the field does not have a comfortable analog for. And the same paper notes the Steppe component is disproportionately concentrated in Brahmin and Bhumihar groups specifically. The asymmetry has a name in the population genetics literature, sex-biased dispersal.
The paper carefully avoids labeling what kind of historical event produces a male-skewed signal of this magnitude.
Honestly, on the record, we do not know.
Most researchers refuse to touch this with a 10-ft pole. The implication is uncomfortable enough that the field has been quietly working around it for a decade. When I read you the line from the paper in a minute, it will click.
But after that, I want to show you a gene you used today if you had milk in your coffee. And after that, the skeleton from Rakhigarhi.
I told you I'd read you the line. We're here. The Yamnaya, the Sintashta, the Andronovo, Bronze Age pastoralists on the Eurasian Steppe around 4,000 years ago. They moved. Some of them moved west. Their descendants reached the Baltic, the Balkans, the British Isles.
They reshaped the European gene pool and they took an ancestral form of Indo-European language with them, which is why English and Russian and Greek share grammatical bones. Other descendants of the same population moved south through what is now Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan into Bactria, into Punjab, into the Gangetic Plain. They mixed with the existing post-Indus Valley population. They brought an Indo-Iranian dialect that became Sanskrit, and they carried the same chromosomes their cousins were carrying west. Here's the page. Page one of the abstract.
Narasimhan, >> [music] >> Patterson, Moorjani, and others.
Science, 2019, volume 365, issue 6,457.
The Steppe ancestry in South Asia has the same profile as that in Bronze Age Eastern Europe. Same profile. Not similar, not related, same.
>> [music] >> The same population that went west to seed European prehistory also went south to seed Indo-Aryan India. India and Europe didn't develop along parallel rivers. They are two deltas of the same [music] source. The paper says it cleanly. The press coverage flattened it. The implication is uncomfortable enough that the field has been quietly working around it for a decade. You will not find this line in the opening of most popular science articles about that paper. You'll find paragraphs about ancestral mixing. You will not find this sentence on its own. And the migration didn't just carry chromosomes, it carried biology you can taste.
Drink a glass of milk and tell me where your ancestors came from.
A 2025 preprint led by Priya Moorjani at UC Berkeley analyzed about 8,000 South Asian genomes, ancient [music] and modern.
The lactase persistence allele that lets Northern Europeans drink milk into adulthood, the variant labeled -13.910T, is the same variant carried by modern North Indians.
The paper traces it directly to Steppe [music] pastoralist gene flow. In most South Asians, it sits passively, hitchhiking on the same migration that brought R1a Z93 and the autosomal signal. But in two specific pastoralist groups, the Toda buffalo herders of South India and the Gujar of Pakistan, the allele underwent independent positive selection with frequencies near 90%.
The paper says [music] these frequencies are comparable to estimates in Northern Europeans. Same gene, same source, two continents away. Independently selected because both populations needed it for the same reason.
If you have North Indian ancestry, you carry pieces of the migration in our opening, not metaphorically.
In your chromosomes, in your gut, when you drink milk, if you can.
So now you have the R1a Z93 split, the 2009 Reich paper, the male skewed steppe a signal, the line from Narasimhan, and the lactase gene that rode along.
Subscribe. And the next video is the one I've been holding back. One ancient genome from Rakhigarhi in the Indus Valley should have settled this debate.
It didn't. That skeleton is what the field is still arguing about. Same river, two deltas, one bone left to read.
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