Take a few minutes of your Friday to fall deep down the rabbit hole of New York City's jaw-dropping linguistic diversity.

This interactive map is the product of more than a decade of research from the Endangered Language Alliance, a group that seeks to document and preserve smaller, minority, and Indigenous languages across New York City.

Each of the 1,200 dots on the map either reflect a conversation with someone knowledgeable about one of the more than 700 existing languages spoken, or a historical data point that delves into the linguistic history of a part of the New York region. Every dot comes with heaps of context, and in some cases, video of native speakers.

So you might listen to a man in deep eastern Queens tell a story about his childhood in his native Amuzgo (also called Nomndaa, spoken around Oaxaca, Mexico), or read about how 3,000 German refugees speaking Palatine German were stranded on Governors Island in 1710 (among their numbers: John Peter Zenger).

Hitting the "data" tab, you can choose a head-spinning number of filters, including video.