Texts, typology & language history in the Southern Cone: 

A digital framework

This website documents the progress of a four-year Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grant looking into the textual materials for languages of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. Its main output will be the Comparative-Historical Corpus of the Southern Cone (CHiCo-SC), which will help us explore language typology and human history in the region


Objectives

Find out about our project to bring together the textual materials for these languages and explore their history.

Target Languages

Find out about the languages we are studying and use our interactive map to explore our sources.

Technologies

Take a look at the kinds of data we are working with and the digital methods we are harnessing to make them more accessible.

People

Meet our team of researchers in Chile, Argentina and the UK, as well as our advisors worldwide!

A resource for researchers and communities

The documentation of indigenous languages of the Americas has often gone hand in hand with the very colonial processes which robbed their speakers of lands, traditions and even the languages themselves. This is particularly true for Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, where European missionaries, explorers and anthropologists squirrelled away, along with baskets, beads and bones, a wealth of wordlists, songs and stories, all the while clearing the way for the infectious diseases, armies and the general ‘progress’ which would dismantle native people’s traditional lifestyles. Our project team, collaborating with indigenous communities, is embarking on a quest to recover these materials, making them available to researchers and the general public as a large digital resource.

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Anthropologist Martin Gusinde with Yahgan (Yamana) men Crees (Chris) and Juan Calderón, c.1920