Early Kuduk Migrations: Difference between revisions

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The migrations are believed to have taken place between 3300 BCE and 900 BCE, spanning from the beginning of the Bronze Age to near the beginning of the Early Middle Ages. Evidence points to there being a split early on near the migration’s starting point with one group migrating westward and the second migrating northeast. The first group later split once again with one group staying behind (group number 5) and the other continuing around the western coast of Kuduk all the way to the far north (group number seven). The second group to split off from the origin point branched off into groups two, three, and four. Group three settled near the modern-day Arakuk Tribe in central Kakut, group two migrated toward eastern Sagut, and group four sailed to Northern Heiki. Another group (group six) split off from group four and migrated along the western coast of Heiki all the way to its southernmost point.
 
== Expansion ==
 
== Evidence and Affected Demography ==
 
== Criticism ==
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