Search for the "Mother of All Languages"
A multidisciplinary team of scientists at the Santa Fe Institute in New
Mexico is working toward reconstructing that mother of all languages.
Headed by Nobel Laureate physicist Murray Gell-Mann, the international Evolution of Human Languages (EHL) project is developing a freely accessible etymological database of the world's languages. Their goal is to trace all living languages back to a common source, a proto-language of a "proto-world" or "proto-sapiens," which arose only once, they believe, before anatomically modern humans left Africa to colonize the world.
These modern humans, who had existed for at least 150,000 years,
suddenly began behaving differently around 50,000 years ago. Until
then, their behavior barely differed from their cousins, the
Neanderthals: both buried their dead, used stone tools, and, as social
apes, both had some form of communication, which some experts think was
gestural.
But then, "almost overnight, everything changes very rapidly," says
Merritt Ruhlen, a lecturer in the Anthropological Sciences Department
at Stanford University and author of The Origin of Language: Tracing the Evolution of the Mother Tongue.
Humans began making much better stone tools. They started burying their
dead with flowers and seemingly religious tokens, and began creating
cave art some 50,000 years ago
"People started having imagination at this time much more than they had earlier," says Dr. Ruhlen.
any scientists think that fully modern human language enabled this "great leap forward." Language enabled abstract thought.
The
EHL project is highly controversial: many linguists say that historical
languages are highly plastic and cannot be studied beyond an 8,000-year
threshold. Languages are constantly changing. And some languages change
more than others. Italian, for example, has remained much closer to
ancestral Latin than French. Lithuanian has many words that almost
exactly match Sanskrit, which was spoken 3,500 years ago. And some
language "families" like Afro-asiatic retain words in common even after
more than 10,000 years of divergent evolution.
EHL has grouped all the world's languages into 12 linguistic superfamilies. They've tentatively grouped four of these superfamilies, which include languages of Eurasia, North Africa, and some Pacific islands (and languages of the Americas) into one super-superfamily dubbed "Borean." An ancestor to a large share of today's languages, Borean was spoken some 16,000 years ago when glaciers covered much of Europe and North America.







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