Siehe zur Kilenge-Sprache den Ethnologue-Eintrag: Maleu-Kilenge: A language of Papua New Guinea. (englisch) In: M. Paul Lewis u. a. (Hrsg.): Ethnologue: Languages of the World. 17. Ausgabe, SIL International, Dallas Texas 2013. Abgerufen am 1. August 2013. Zitat: „Population: 5,200 (1983 census). 1,560 Kilenge. Location: West New Britain Province, Talasea district west tip.“
everyculture.com
Siehe zum Lakalai-Volk: Ann Chowning: Lakalai. (englisch) In: Countries and Their Cultures. 1997(?). Abgerufen am 1. August 2013. Zitat: „Lakalai – Orientation: [...] Location: The Lakalai are distinguished from speakers of related dialects and languages, all labeled Nakanai, by the absence of the phoneme n in their language. [...] they often identify themselves to outsiders simply as West Nakanai. [...] Lakalai villages are on the central and Eastern part of the Hoskins Peninsula on the island of New Britain. [...] The population increased from under 2,700 in 1954 to almost 6,500 in 1980. The expansion reflects recovery from depopulation occasioned by Japanese occupation during World War II, coupled with the abolition of warfare and access to Western medicine. [...] Lakalai is an Oceanic (Austronesian) language, the westernmost of a chain of dialects also spoken in Ubae, in the West Nakanai Census Division, and in coastal villages of Central Nakanai Census Division, to the east. [...] Lakalai – Kinship – Kin Groups and Descent: Every Lakalai is born into a named, nonlocalized, agamous matrilineal descent group [...]“. Info: Chowning, englische Professorin für Anthropologie, ist ausgewiesene Kennerin des Lakalai-Volkes und liefert eine detaillierte ethnosoziologische Übersicht (vermutlich 1997 erstellt).
pngbd.com
Volkszählung 2000: Population by Province, PNG, 2000 Census. In: A Tourism Guide to Papua New Guinea, Papua New Guinea Business Directory. Abgerufen am 1. August 2013.