Siberia is linguistically diverse, both with so-called “Paleo-Siberian languages”, including for example the Chutko-Kamchatkan and Yukaghir families, as well as the larger, arguably more recently-distributed families such as Uralic, Turkic, Mongolic and Tungusic - although in reality I think that in many ways the aforementioned families also have an ancient presence in Siberia, as I have discussed elsewhere.
Photo below: part of the Western Sayan Mountains in the Ergaki Nature Park, part of the indigenous landscape of the now-extinct Mator language. In this photo we can see tēre (1)- “God, sky”, hä (1)- “tree” or “forest”, bijä (1)- “mountain” and čä (1) – “pine tree” Copyright information is below the image.
The photo above was published under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license and uploaded to Wikimedia commons by user Tschitschaloff,…
