Native American languages of Colorado

Colorado, a state in the western United States that straddles the heights of the Rocky Mountains and the western edges of the Great Plains, has been the traditional home of several Uto-Aztecan, Algonquian, and Tanoan tribes. However, all tribes except for bands of the Ute were relocated to other states, primarily Wyoming and Oklahoma, during the Westward Expansion of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As such, in total, there is only one remaining Native American language spoken in Colorado: Colorado River Numic.

Distribution

There is only one Native American language currently spoken in Colorado. Population estimates are based on figures from Ethnologue and U.S. Census data, as given in sub-pages below. The language is shown in the table below:

LanguageClassificationNumber of SpeakersTotal Ethnic PopulationTribe(s) IncludedLocation(s) in ColoradoSignificant External Populations
Colorado River NumicUto-Aztecan: Numic: Southern Numic2,0005,000Ute: Ute Mountain, Southern UteUte Mountain Indian Reservation, Southern Ute Indian ReservationNevada, Utah, Arizona, California
gollark: Nonsense. Haskell is perfectly maintainable.
gollark: String interpolation, while quite convenient, can lead to injection things since it's easier than doing things properly with bound parameters or HTML escaping or whatever.
gollark: Well, at least it's not *memory*-unsafe, although it introduces !!FUN!! new problems.
gollark: People can earn money writing COBOL.
gollark: That doesn't make the language good.

See also

References

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