HARVARD - Language said Peru is listed as missing had been found among the debris of the church.
400-year-old letter found in the language reveals that speech.
This language has been recorded by someone not known from Spain and lost for four centuries.
This obsolete piece of paper found in the ancient church of colonial Spain in 2008.
But the team of scientists and linguists have recently succeeded in expressing the importance of the words written on the back side of the letter.
Writers in the early days of the 17th century could mean some Spanish and Arabic numerals into the mysterious language that has never been seen by modern scholars.
"Although this letter does not inform a lot of things, but it shows that the language is very different from what we've got"
"That's it, another foreign language may be many out there," said study leader, Jeffrey Quilter, an archaeologist at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard.
Original language only recently discovered this possibility is taken from the Quechua, the language still used by some indigenous communities in Peru, Quilter said.
Language has a unique form of pronunciation in which either of them is the language used for fishing.
The discovery of a new language in Magdalena de Cao Viejo help experts understand the rich diversity in culture of early colonial America, Quilter said.
"We often think of upheaval in the Spanish and Native American. Almost every location, especially Massachusetts and Peru, shows the confrontation while creating a more diverse group. "
"It really shows how rich and diverse world."
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