A wild 50,000-year ride
The study of languages in prehistory critically involves the ever changing sound patterns of human languages, in short speech. Speech is the default medium for language, and it most likely has a long evolutionary history. However, the fully human speech anatomy which allows us to produce the most common, “universal” vowels [i], [u] and [a], first appears in the fossil record in the Upper Paleolithic (about 50,000 years ago) and was absent in both Neanderthals and earlier humans. Recent genetic evidence also suggests the appearance of the neural substrate that is necessary to regulate human speech within the past 100,000 years. Thus, we have had a wild ride – creating thousands of languages since the Upper Paleolithic start-point for fully human linguistic capacity.
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Nikolsky, Aleksey
2020.
“Talking Jew’s Harp” and Its Relation to Vowel Harmony as a Paradigm of Formative Influence of Music on Language. In
The Origins of Language Revisited,
► pp. 217 ff.
Pennisi, Antonino & Alessandra Falzone
2016.
Bio-Linguistic Plasticity and Origin of Language. In
Darwinian Biolinguistics [
Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology, 12],
► pp. 211 ff.
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