Jim G. Shaffer (born 1944) is an American archaeologist and professor of anthropology at Case Western Reserve University.
According to him, there is no archaeological indication of an Aryan migration into northwestern India during or after the decline of the Harappan city culture.
[3] Shaffer gives two possible alternative explanations for the similarities between Sanskrit and western languages.
[4] The first is a linguistic relationship with a "Zagrosian family of language linking Elamite and Dravidian on the Iranian Plateau," as proposed by McAlpin; according to Shaffer "linguistic similarities may have diffused west from the plateau as a result of the extensive trading networks linking cultures in the plateau with those in Mesopotamia and beyond," while also linking with the Kelteminar culture in Central Asia.
[5][note 1] Yet, Shaffer also notes that the Harappan culture was not extensively tied to this network in the third century BCE, leaving the possibility that "membership in a basic linguistic family - Zagrosian - may account for some of the linguistic similarities of later periods.