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The Yukaghir birch-bark carvings, known in the Yukaghir language as tos, were traditionally made by Yukaghir people of Siberia on birch bark for various purposes such as mapping, record-keeping, and party games. The symbols were inscribed on the inner side of the birch bark using the sharp end of a knife. Russian writers observed these carvings in the 1890s, and based on their descriptions, several 20th-century scholars misunderstood them to be the examples of a writing system. One particular carving became well-known as the "Yukaghir love letter", but is actually the product of a guessing game.
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