Early Kuduk Migrations: Difference between revisions
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The Primary evidence for the hypothesis is archaeological—a great number of the artifacts recovered surrounding the areas touched by the migration path are remarkably similar, suggesting a common cultural origin. The origin point of the Early Kuduk peoples was located around the southwestern point of the modern-day Manirak Tribe. However, attempts to correlate the expected pathways of the migrations to the expansion and evolution of Kuduk’s language have been inconclusive. While the migrations are widely accepted in the history community to have happened, the lack of linguistic and genetic evidence supporting it renders its status as just a hypothesis.
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
== Expansion ==
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