ABSTRACT

Alekseenko 1969a (South Siberia), 1973a (South Siberia, Karasuk), 1973b and 1975a (Yugh origins from aboriginal taiga dwellers), 1976c (Kulai), 1977c (from South Siberia), 1980b (general survey); Alekseev and Gokhman 1984 (affinity with SE Asians); Aristov 1897 (Europoid Dinglings); Blaiek and Bengtson 1995b (Dene-Caucasian); Bogoraz 1926 (Protoasiatic remnant), 1927b (from east rather than west); Butanaev 1984 and 1992a (Okunev), 1988 (Khakas, Yenisei Kirghiz), 1994 (Khakas); Chindina 1992; Chlenova 1964 (Karasuk, Irmen), 1967 (Karasuk, but not Tagar), 1969 and 1975 (Karasuk); Debets 1931 (not Dingling), 1947 (Americanoid); Deniker 1902 (Kin-Kuen, Ting-ling); Denning 1984 (origin ofKureika Kets); Dolgikh 1934 (Japhetic), 1961 (Karasuk); Dremov 1967 (Irmen culture not Yeniseian), 1976 (ancient Europoids); Dudko 1978 (archeology); Dul'zon 1959a (pre-Yeniseian aboriginal toponyms), 1966e,g,h (Huns), 1966f (southern origin), 1968a (Huns), 1969e (Chukchi-Kamchatkan), 1969j and 1971g (Huns); Filimonov 1993 (Pazyryk), 1995b (ancient Altai), 1995c (Xiong-nu), 1995d (Kulai); Findeisen 1927 (survey of theories), 1937 and 1940 (Indo-China); Gokhman 1969 (Tuva); Grebtsov 1989 (Northern Angara); Grumm-Grzhimailo 1909 and 1926 (Dingling); Guber 1941 (Upper Yenisei valley); Gumilev 1959 (not Dingling), 1960 (Huns, Dinglings); Gurvich 1975, 1982; Heller 1930 (comparison with Amerindians); Iailenko 1990a,b (ancient Iranian); VIvanov and Toporov 1964a,b (southern); Janhunen 1996 (Tashtyk, Xiong-nu); Jettmar 1951 (Minusin Basin); Jochelson 1928; Khit' 1984; Kiriushin and Maloletko 1996 (Andronovo, SW Asia); Kiselev 1951 (Karasuk); Kiuner 1961 (Dinglings); Kosarev 1966 (Karasuk), 1974 (Samus culture); Levin 1961; Ligeti 1950-1 (Huns); Makarova 1986 (Kureika Ket origins); Maloletko 1979 (Karasuk), 1989 (Karasuk and Irmen cultures), 1994 (Andronovo, Fyodorovo, North Caucasus, SW Asia), 1993b (SW Asia), 1995a,b (SW Asia, Irmen and other cultures), 1997 (SW Asia); Mannai-Ool and Tatarintsev 1976 (probably not Karasuk or Hun); Nikolaev 1958a and 1960b (Tagar, Dingling), 1958b (taiga aborigines), 1960a and 1962 (Dingling, Sino-Tibetan), 1960c, 1963a,b (Tagar culture), 1973 (four components), 1977a and 1980a (three components), 1978a (Dingling), 1982a (Dingling, as protrayed in a fictional novel), 1983a (Karasuk and Kulai), 1983b (Karasukh, Dingling, southern and northern components), 1984b (Dingling, Karasuk, Hunnic), 1984c (southern and northern components), 1985a (southern and northern components), 1985c (various hypotheses), 1986c (Kulai), 1989a (Dingling), 1989b (Tagar and Kulai, but not Karasuk), 1995 (Kulai); Okladnikov 1941 and 1955 (ancestors of the Yakut), 1968 (prehistoric distribution); Polenova 1993 (northern, southern components); Potapov 1969 (not Hunnic); Prokof'ev 1940 (two ancient Siberian components); Radloff 1884 and Radlov 1989 (Dinglings); Ramstedt 1907 (southern origin); Razinkin 1989 (Tagar and unknown taiga aborigines), 1992 (steppe horsebreeders and taiga aborigines as ancestors of the Yugh); Ritter 1832, etc. (Tibetans, Dingling); Shaleva 1983 (Kureika Kets); Shrenk 1883 (Paleoasiatic); Shternberg 1899 (not from ancient Europoids); Simchenko 1982 (ancient taiga aborigines); Sokolova 1980 (ancient Uralic substrate); Tomaschek 1888a,b (ancient Iranian, Turkic, Ding-Ling); Toporov 1970 (ancient Iranian); Torday 1997 (Hsiung-nu); Uraev 1959 (Kulai); Vainshtein 1969 (Karasuk culture), 1980b (Huns, Synchuretsk); A. Vasil'ev 1890; V Vasil'ev 1978 (taiga aborigines), 1987 (southern and northern components); G. Verner 1973b (connected with Basques, Burushaski, North Caucasians, Huns), 1985c (Karasuk, SWAsia, Huns).