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Isonymy and isolation by distance in Germany.: An article from: Human Biology

Author A. Rodriguez-Larralde, I. Barrai, C. Nesti, E. Mamolini, C. Scapoli
Publisher Wayne State University Press
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ISBN / ASINB00098FA30
ISBN-13978B00098FA38
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
Sales Rank99,999,999
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This digital document is an article from Human Biology, published by Wayne State University Press on December 1, 1998. The length of the article is 4834 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the author: The isonymy structure of Germany was studied using the surname distributions of 5,150,310 private telephone users selected from 39,000,000 users registered in a 1996 commercial CD-ROM, which contains all telephone users in the country. The users were distributed in 106 towns selected on a geographic basis. Germany was subdivided into 50 adjacent rectangles, each 115 X 80 km, and at least the largest town in the rectangle was selected for study; the private telephone users in that district were downloaded from the CD-ROM and included in the analysis. The shortest distance between nearest neighbor towns was 10.7 km (Travemunde and Lubeck), and the largest distance was 69.8 km (Meppen and Osnabruck). The number of different surnames found in the whole analysis was 462,526. Lasker's distance, the negative value of the logarithm of isonymy between localities, was found to be linearly and significantly correlated with geographic distance (r = 0.51 [+ or -] 0.010). A dendrogram was built with the matrix of isonymy distances, using UPGMA. This method separates the German towns into two main clusters, one in the southern half of the country and the other in the northern half. Within each cluster small subclusters with specific geographic distributions could be delimited. The two main clusters correspond fairly well to the north-south division of German sublanguages (Nieder- and Mitteldeutsch in the north vs. Frankisch-Alemannisch in the south). The other clusters are related to minor sublanguages. Comparisons with the results of a previous analysis of Switzerland's structure are given. From the present analysis isolation by distance emerges clearly, although it is less strong than in Switzerland and indicates that Germany has a fairly homogeneous isonymy structure. The random component of inbreeding estimated from isonymy indicates that eastern Germany is on average more inbred than western Germany.

Citation Details
Title: Isonymy and isolation by distance in Germany.
Author: A. Rodriguez-Larralde
Publication:Human Biology (Refereed)
Date: December 1, 1998
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Volume: 70 Issue: 6 Page: 1041(1)

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