native american indian tribes of the US & Canada    | Add us to your Favorites |      | Shop
Art | Arts & Crafts | Craft Supplies | Clothing |Figurines | Jewelry | Home Decor | Knives | New Products | On Sale! | Closeouts
native americans pets and north american wildlife - us  indian tribes native americans alaska natives - alaskan villages Canada First Nations U.S. Indian Tribes ancient indian civilizations native american genealogy native american posters and art prints native american catalog online
aboriginal people of north america native people of north america - free pictures native american art native american directory
american indian legends
   Celebrating native american indian tribes of the US and Canada
 
Shop for native american themed gifts
 Native American Home |InfoWizzard |New Site | All Categories | Articles Master List | Topics Site Map |What's New |Mail Bag

Over 2,000 articles about native americans of the US and Canada First Nations.


Submit your own articles about american indians without knowing any HTML here
 Are you ready?
Today's Top Story:
Do indian reservations need summer volunteers?
Random Headlines

Crafts and Culture
[ Crafts and Culture ]

·Many Indians say, 'no thanks' to Thanksgiving
·The Mother Blessingway Ceremony
·ancient sla-hal bones identified, also known as the Bone Game or Stick Game
·Indian people knew the universe and followed the stars
·Weaving a story: Artist Jesse Henderson honors his Chippewa-Cree heritage
·Regalia Stolen, reward offered for their return
·Evolution of Native American Stickball into the modern game of LaCrosse
·Pueblo symbols and their meanings
·Turquoise, the fallen Sky stone
Traffic Ranking
indian tribeSite Sections
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesActivism &
indian tribesIssues
indian tribesAlaskan Natives
indian tribesAncient Cultures
indian tribesBlood Quantum
indian tribesIndian Dances
indian tribesFirst Nations
indian tribesNA Genealogy
indian tribesFree Pictures
indian tribesNA Poems
indian tribesNA Posters
indian tribesTribal Locations indian tribesMap
indian tribesUS Tribes

Guests
Login/Join
indian tribesYou are an Anonymous user. Anonymous users are not allowed to post stories or leave comments. You can register for FREE.Members have access to more features.
indian tribeSite Info
indian tribesAdd URL
indian tribesContact Us
indian tribesFAQs
indian tribesMail Bag
indian tribesRecommend Us
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesSite Info Index
indian tribesSurveys
indian tribesTop 100 Lists
indian tribesWeb Directory
indian tribesWhat's New

Link Partners
art & artists
birth defect info
earth science
california indians
dog breeds
flowers and gardening
greek mythology
health & diets
holiday ideas
learn the web
addicted to sports
pets and wildlife
travel guides
Spirit Guides
web design
Recent Articles
Monday, March 03
· Little Carpenter, Cherokee 1699 - 1797
· Casting Call given for The Lost Warrior
Friday, February 29
· How do I go about researching my Algonquin genealogy?
Wednesday, February 27
· National Indian Education Association is hiring
· Top 100 native american posters
Saturday, February 09
· What indian tribes originated in Kansas?
Sunday, January 27
· Native American themed checks
Tuesday, January 22
· photography competition for Native students
Friday, January 18
· New Aboriginal Film Site on the Web
Tuesday, January 15
· TV Review: 1st segment of Comanche Moon mini-series

Older Articles
Today's Featured Category

Travel & Tourism
[ Travel & Tourism ]

·Chaco and Mesa Verde: Southwest parks with similar history but different visitor experiences
·A salute to Native baseball players
·Yavapai Nation offers cultural tour of tribal lands
·Mt. Rushmore vs. Crazy Horse Memorial
·70 foot Skywalk at Grand Canyon will open to public on March 28
·Tribal park set to offer guided tours through ruins on Ute Mountain this summer
·A visit to Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico is a sacred journey
·Old ones' spirit still palpable at Bandelier National Monument
·Experience the Grand Canyon with the Hualapai Nation
Privacy Policy
Any information collected on our site is used for internal purposes only and will not be shared or sold to third parties!
Your transactions in our store are secure


Official PayPal Seal
Videos of the Week
Native Genocide
Native american history song by Baby Gurl with photo collage 4:22 minutes

Healing Heart of Humanity
Humanity Healing Network invites you to embrace a revolutionary concept. 4:39 minutes

Native American Chicken Dance
A native american chicken dance performed at a pow wow. 3:37 minutes

Leonard Peltier ~ Americas Mandela
The story of the more than 60 men and women who died during the "reign of terror." How all that relates to the case of Leonard Peltier. 11:58 minutes.

 Lang->Athabascan: Siberian language may be related to Nadene languages
Posted on Sunday, April 06 @ 16:50:24 PDT




AUTHOR: George Bryson

A panel of respected linguists who met in Anchorage on Friday are hailing new research that links the Old World language of Ket, still spoken sparingly along the Yenisei River in western Siberia, and the sprawling New World family of Na-Dene languages -- a broad grouping that encompasses the many Athabascan tribes in Alaska, along with the Tlingit and Eyak people, as well as Indian populations in western Canada and the American Southwest, including the Navajo and the Apache.

StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble It!

A remote population of a few hundred indigenous Siberians who live thousands of miles west of Alaska speak a language that appears to be an ancient relative of more than three dozen Native languages in North America, experts say.

A regional Eskimo dialect straddles the Bering Strait



Other than Siberian Yupik, a regional Eskimo dialect that straddles the Bering Strait, a connection between North American and Asian language families had never before been demonstrated.

The research by University of Western Washington linguist Edward Vajda, who spent 10 years deciphering the Ket language, drew upon parallel work by three Alaskans -- Jeff Leer, Michael Krauss and James Kari, professors of linguistics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks -- who independently detailed patterns in Na-Dene languages.

Establishing that two such far-distant language groups are closely related is both demanding and rare in the exacting field of historical linguistics, according to participants who attended a language symposium at the annual meeting of the Alaska Anthropological Association.

Relationships between Asian and North American languages



That Interior Indian languages spoken in North America are related to languages spoken in Asia has long been assumed, since other fields of science have widely concluded that the Americas weren't populated until ice age hunters migrated across a temporary land bridge from the old world to the new some 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.

And as early as 1923, other linguists speculated specifically about a genetic link between the Yeniseic family of languages spoken along the Yenisei River (of which Ket is now the only surviving member) and the Na-Dene family, spoken in North America. Ten years ago, American linguist Merritt Ruhlen did so again after producing a list of 36 cognates -- comparable words in two languages that sound alike and mean the same thing.

But producing lists of similar-sounding words isn't sufficient evidence to establish a real genetic relationship between two languages, declared Bernard Comrie, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, speaking at the conference.

That's because cognates can also occur by accident or chance -- when selective words are adopted by travelers from unrelated languages, or when words have a universal appeal.

New findings based on complex and verifiable morphologies



What makes the new finding so exciting, Comrie said, is that it's based on complex and verifiable morphologies that show how certain Ket words were systematically altered to create Athabascan words -- or vice versa (the research doesn't speculate on which language came first or when).

Vajda began studying the Ket language firsthand in the 1990s after the Iron Curtain fell and he interviewed Ket speakers in the southwestern Siberia city of Tomsk, as well as in Germany.

"There is no road and no train," Vajda said in an interview last week in Anchorage, here to address the symposium. "You have to go by steamboat or helicopter to get there."

Only 100 fluent speakers of Ket remain



Through his research and interviews, Vajda determined that there are about 1,200 people who say they are Ket, including about 200 people who speak the language. But only about 100 speak Ket fluently, Vajda said, and nearly all of them are now older than 50.

"They were the last hunters of north Asia that didn't have any domesticated animals that they used for food," he said. "They moved around, they didn't live in the same place."

That came to an end when the Stalin regime in the Soviet Union forced the Ket to live in villages. Now their traditional lifestyle is nearly gone, Vajda said -- and their language is disappearing too.

While trying to capture it before it vanishes altogether, Vajda gained a new understanding about the peculiarities of Ket verbs, suffixes and tonalities -- which are unlike any of the other Siberian languages to the east.

Comparing what he learned with research conducted independently in Alaska, Vajda began to find words the two languages had in common. A news release issued this week by the Alaska Native Language Center at UAF concurs, noting language similarities "too numerous and displaying too many idiosyncratic parallels to be explained by anything other than common descent."

Among linguistic scholars elsewhere who've reviewed Vajda's paper in its draft form and reacted favorably so far is Dr. Heinrich Werner of Bonn, Germany -- a world authority in the Ket language, whose work Vajda cited and incorporated into his own, along with that of the Alaskans.

Vajda thinks his research might be a door-opener for scientists in other fields, including those who work in human genetics and archaeology, to proceed with additional comparisons of the two cultures.

He says it also points out the necessity and urgency to record dying languages before they disappear.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Find George Bryson online or call 257-4318.




23



 
Google

Web AAANativeArts.com

New Navigation
(New Site Design in Progress)
US Tribes
Canadian First Nations
Shopping

Related Links
· Submit article on this topic
· Shopping Index
· Native American Languages Inde
· More about American Indian Languages
· News by aaanativearts


Most read story about American Indian Languages:
Tribes from the Algonquian language group

Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

Sorry, due to unrelenting spammers, we have had to disable the ability to leave comments.





©2002 - AAA Native Arts


Website Ranking

Website Designed by: Mazaska Web Design
Hosted by: HostIt4You.com

file: 1576 Siberian language may be related to Nadene languages