By ROBERT LEE HOTZ
Chris Rainier
A Koro speaker talks to National Geographic Fellow Gregory Anderson in Arunachal Pradesh, India, as he makes a recording of the language.
In the foothills of the Himalayas, two field linguists have uncovered a find as rare as any endangered species—a language completely new to science.
The researchers encountered it for the first time along the western ridges of Arunachal Pradesh, India's northeastern-most state, where more than 120 languages are spoken. There, isolated by craggy slopes and rushing rivers, the hunters and subsistence farmers who speak this rare tongue live in a dozen or so villages of bamboo houses built on stilts./.../
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