Karkin language explained

Karkin
States:United States
Region:California
Ethnicity:Karkin people
Extinct:1950s
Ref:e16
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Yok-Utian
Fam2:Utian
Fam3:Ohlone
Iso3:krb
Glotto:kark1259
Glottorefname:Karkin

The Karkin language (also called Los Carquines in Spanish) is an extinct Ohlone language. It was formerly spoken in north central California, but by the 1950s there were no more native speakers. The language was historically spoken by the Karkin people, who lived in the Carquinez Strait region in the northeast portion of the San Francisco Bay estuary.[1]

Karkin's only documentation is a single vocabulary obtained by linguist-missionary Felipe Arroyo de la Cuesta at Mission Dolores in 1821.[2] Although meager, the records of Karkin show that it constituted a distinct branch of Ohlone, strikingly different from the neighboring Chochenyo Ohlone language and other Ohlone languages spoken farther south.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Milliken 1995:238
  2. Milliken 2008:6
  3. Beeler 1961