History, asked by LoveAnimal222, 3 months ago

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Lost tribes Hidden away in dense tropical rain forests in the Amazon and Indonesia live a handful of small tribes, mostly untouched by the modern world. These tribes exist in exactly the same way as they have done for tens of thousands of years.

The Awa Guaja live on the remote sierra of northeast Brazil, where the men hunt using bows and arrows, and the women harvest bananas and wild berries. They are always naked, and are known for smiling a lot!

The Naua people of northwest Brazil’s rain forests were thought to have died out in the 1920s, but they were just living in secret. In 2000, about 250 Naua people were spotted. Some were working as rubber tappers, gathering latex from rubber trees.

The Yanomami are found on the border between Brazil and Venezuela. They live together in huge round huts called yanos, and grow plants for food and medicine in “gardens” in the forest. They hold huge tug-of-war games that last for hours.

The Zo’e or People of the Moon live in unexplored rain forests in northern Brazil, where they hunt monkeys. Their bottom lips are pierced by a wooden plug called a poturu, and they smear their bodies in the red dye of the urucum fruit.

The Huaorani of Ecuador have a deep knowledge of plants. From one specific vine they extract the paralyzing poison, curare, which they then use on the darts of blowpipes to hunt howler monkeys. They honor trees and worship jaguars.

The Nukak of Colombia build makeshift houses of leaves, but soon move on to hunt monkeys with blowpipes. They dip rattan vine roots in streams to release a drug that stuns fish. The fish can then be hunted with bows and arrows.

The Mashco Piro live in the far west of the Amazon jungle in Peru, in swampy river regions where they fish for food. They were given the name “mashco,” which means “nakeds,” by rubber barons, who tried to enslave them before they escaped into the jungle.

The Yora live in the rain forest of southeast Peru. During the dry season, they live by rivers to make fishing easier, and to pick up turtles’ eggs on the rivers’ beaches. In the wet season, they retreat into the forest to hunt, and collect fruits and nuts.

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Answered by jhanvi122643
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