Activities and Related Links
- Breath of Life Workshop
- CBOLD
- Group on American Indian Languages (GAIL)
- Sino-Tibetan Etymological Dictionary and Thesaurus (STEDT)
- Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
- Yahi Project
- Yurok Project
Recent Berkeley Ph.D. dissertations involving fieldwork and language documentation:
- Rebecca T. Cover, 2010, Aspect, Modality, and Tense in Badiaranke (Line Mikkelsen, chair)
- Erin F. Haynes, 2010, Phonetic and Phonological Acquisition in Endangered Languages Learned by Adults: A Case Study of Numu (Oregon Northern Paiute) (Alice Gaby and Leanne Hinton, co-chairs)
- Teresa McFarland, 2008, The phonology and morphology of Filomeno Mata Totonac (Sharon Inkelas, chair)
- Gabriela Caballero, 2008, Choguita Rarámuri (Tarahumara) Phonology and Morphology (Andrew Garrett, chair)
- Christian Dicanio. The Phonetics and Phonology of San Martín Itunyoso Trique (Keith Johnson, chair)
- William Weigel, 2005, Yowlumne in the Twentieth Century (Leanne Hinton, chair)
- Rosemary Beam de Azcona, 2004, A Coatlan-Loxicah Zapotec Grammar (Leanne Hinton, chair)
- Buszard-Welcher, Laura, 2003, Constructional Polysemy and Mental Spaces in Potawatomi Discourse (Richard Rhodes, chair)
- Lahaussois, Aimee, 2002, Aspects of the Grammar of Thulung Rai: an Endangered Himalayan Language (James Matisoff, chair)