<div>Dear colleagues,<br><br>Hello. We've just updated our website on South American languages as well<br>(although the result is far from being as organized or comprehensive as<br>Nathan's Australian Aboriginal Languages site). Our address is
<br><a href="http://etnolinguistica.org/"><font color="#810081">http://etnolinguistica.org</font></a>. Comments, criticisms, and suggestions will be<br>very much appreciated!<br><br>Best,<br><br>Mônica Veloso Borges<br>(Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil)
</div>
<div><br><br>----- Original Message ----- <br>From: "David Nathan" <<a href="mailto:dn2@SOAS.AC.UK">dn2@SOAS.AC.UK</a>><br>To: <<a href="mailto:ENDANGERED-LANGUAGES-L@LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG">ENDANGERED-LANGUAGES-L@LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
</a>><br>Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2007 7:07 PM<br>Subject: Aboriginal Languages of Australia Virtual Library - major update<br><br><br>> (Apologies for cross-posting)<br>> Dear colleagues<br>> The Aboriginal Languages of Australia Virtual Library at
<br>> <a href="http://www.dnathan.com/VL/">http://www.dnathan.com/VL/</a> has just been fully updated, with 36 new items, <br>> over 20 ''lost'' sites relocated, and 25 permanently dead links removed. A
<br>> new phenomenon since the last update is the emergence of blogs. There has <br>> been an overall increase to 231 items in 76 languages from 224 items in 70 <br>> languages (in May 2005), and the proportion provided by Indigenous sources
<br>> has risen slightly from 33% to 35%. In general the situation for <br>> Australian languages web resources has become more stable in the last two <br>> years.<br>> - David Nathan <br> </div>