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Who are the people who live in the Himalayas?

Indo-European language family, the three main ethnic groups in the Indian subcontinent

(Around 2000 BC, white people who came down from Central Asia in the western Pamirs to the South Asian subcontinent are now mixed with Australian ancestry), the Tibeto-Burman language family and the Dravidian language family-the first two language families have very corresponding communities in the Himalayan region, although they are mixed together in different proportions in different regions. Their distribution is the result of the long-term infiltration history of the Europa people from the west of Congling (Pamir Plateau), the Indians from the south and the Asian tribes (Mongols) from the east and north. In Nepal, which occupies the middle of the Himalayas13, these ethnic groups are intertwined.

The infiltration of the low Himalayas has promoted the migration activities into and across rivers and plains in South Asia. Generally speaking, the Great Himalayas and Tethys Himalayas are the places where Tibetans and other Tibetans and Burmese (Mongolians) live, while the Little Himalayas are the tall and white homes of Indo-Europeans. On the outskirts of the Himalayas in Jammu and Kashmir, Indo-European society is called the Dogra Dynasty. Gadi people and Gugalj people living in the Little Himalayas also belong to the European group (always South Asians). Gadi people are essentially mountain people; They have a large number of sheep and goats. Only in winter will they leave their homes in the snowy areas outside the Himalayas, go down the mountain with the sheep, and then return to the highest pasture in June. Gugalj people are a nomadic people, living on sheep, goats and several cows. They look for pastures for their cattle and sheep at different heights.