Links
A) Dolgopolsky’s Nostratic Dictionary
The Third Edition of Dolgopolsky’s Nostratic Dictionary (Cambridge University, 2012) is available for download here – both in its complete version and as separate sections
http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/244080
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/items/af09c345-2382-497e-a958-25f9283cd8a2
B) Aharon Dolgopolsky’s estate at the Linguistics Department at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem
The library of the Hebrew University’s Linguistics Department (at the Mount Scopus campus) houses a donation from Prof. Aharon Dolgopolsky’s estate, containing approximately 1,500 books in the field of Historical Linguistics. In addition to materials relating to the Nostratic hypothesis – Dolgopolsky’s main area of research – this collection also includes books related to the study of various language families.
https://huji.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/
C) The Aharon Dolgopolsky page on the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Linguistics website
https://iling-ran.ru/web/en/scholars/dolgopolsky
D) Aharon Dolgopolsky’s 85th Jubilee page at the Russian State University for the Humanities’ website
https://publications.hse.ru/books/214731409
E) Papers by and about Aharon Dolgopolsky (in alphabetical order of authors)
Dolgopolsky’s paper “How they spoke six thousand years ago”, translated by Matvey Borun
https://www.academia.edu/36266521/Aharon_Dolgopolsky_How_they_spoke_six_thousand_years_ago
The entry on Aharon Dolgopolsky in the Shorter Jewish Encyclopedia (3rd supplemental volume; in Russian)
https://eleven.co.il/state-of-israel/science/11453
Dolgopolsky’s paper “Which languages are related to the European ones?”, translated by Matvey Borun
An interview with Dennis Ioffe for Topos (in Russian)
https://www.topos.ru/article/1958
“The ‘Nostratic’ roots of Indo-European: from Illich-Svitych to Dolgopolsky to future horizons” by Alexei S. Kassian, George Starostin & Mikhail Zhivlov
https://www.academia.edu/30579032/
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/
Israel Lugovskoy’s article “The relationships between languages and ancient history”, based on two popular papers by Aharon Dolgopolsky (in Russian)
http://www.elektron2000.com/lugovskoi_0020.html
Philip E. Ross, “Hard Words” – an article paper on the Nostratic hypothesis, with extensive references to Aharon Dolgopolsky and his work. Scientific American 264/4 (April 1991), pp. 138-147
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/24936873 (paywall)
An abstract of Gábor Takács’ paper “A. Dolgopolsky’s Nostratic Dictionary and Afro-Asiatic (Semito-Hamitic)”
http://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10122-011-0008-3