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  1. Crozier and Roger Blench (1992), which in turn replaced Keir Hansford, John Bendor-Samuel and Ron Stanford (1976), a pioneering attempt to synthesise what was known at the time about the languages of Nigeria and their classification. It has been renamed the ‘Atlas’ to mark a radical revison of these documents.

  2. Paper for proceedings of 13th Nilo-Saharan Conference, University of Addis Ababa, 6th May, 2017. Moges Yigezu ed. F. Saharan. Beria dictionary. Compliled from multiple sources by Roger Blench. G. Songhay. Saharan and Songhay form a branch of Nilo-Saharan. Unpublished paper presented at the Afrikanistentag.

  3. Keywords; Africa; language families; archaeological; palaeoclimate ii Roger Blench Africa: the last 12,000 years. Draft 1. Introduction African languages represent nearly a third of all the languages spoken in the world today; apart from their incalculable value as intangible human heritage, they represent a rich source of information on the history of the continent.

  4. Genetic studies indicates quite clearly that the Hadza, at least, are no closer to the Khoesan speakers than to any other African population with which they have been compared (Knight et al. 2003). However, today this diversity has virtually disappeared, both linguistically and phenotypically.

  5. Roger Blench: data, publications and work in progress By topic

  6. It includes comparative evidence for agriculture, livestock, an aquatic lifestyle, but also suggests we reconstruct something of the culture of the early Austroasiatic-speakers, looking at words for ‘trade’, hunting equipment and for musical practice. fRoger Blench Austroasiatic prehistory. Final for publisher 1.

  7. 5. Conclusions: further research. This paper has pulled together a variety of evidence, linguistic, archaeological, ethnographic and textual, supporting the hypothesis that Daic is a branch of Austronesian and that its earliest speakers may have left Taiwan during the period of the earliest Austronesian expansion.