
Razib Khan's Unsupervised Learning Peter Nimitz: the story of the Slavs
Feb 12, 2026
Peter Nimitz, historian behind the Nemets Substack, blends archaeology, paleogenetics and climate data to retell Eurasian deep history. He maps proto‑Slavic origins in Corded Ware zones and traces Bronze Age shocks, migrations and demographic replacements. He discusses how low‑tech Slavic societies expanded after 500 CE and how later political and ecological shifts shaped modern Slavic diversity.
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Forest Refuge And Slavic Ethnogenesis
- The Fatyánovo–Balanovo (Fetianovo‑Blanivo) corded‑ware groups pushed hunter‑gatherers north and reshaped eastern European demography.
- These shifts produced refugia populations north of the forest line that later fuelled Slavic ethnogenesis.
Climate, Chariots, And Population Shifts
- Major climatic shocks around 2300–2200 BC and innovations like the chariot reorganized Eurasian populations.
- These disruptions enabled eastern steppe groups to expand and accelerated cultural and linguistic splits.
Multiwave Formation Of Proto‑Balto‑Slavic
- Proto‑Balto‑Slavic likely formed via multiple waves and mixtures from Trzciniec/Ruchewo and Middle Dnieper contacts.
- The Sniezhin/Sosnitsa zone (north central Ukraine–southern Belarus) emerges as a key proto‑Slavic core.
