Isolated Amazonian Tribe Reaches Out For Help
Isolated Amazonian Tribe Reaches Out For Help
By Jayalakshmi K
July 13, 2014 09:25 BST
After a gap of 20 years, an isolated Amazonian tribe has made contact with Brazilian scientists, according to an announcement from the country's Indian affairs department (FUNAI). Emerging from the dense rainforests along the Upper Envira river, the group contacted the officials, who were in the area following complaints from local villagers about fearful strangers raiding their crops and tools.
The officials suspect the present tribe fled illegal loggers some 186 miles away in Peru. The loggers may have driven away the animals the tribe hunted, forcing them to migrate. According to Science Now, there are at least 70 isolated tribes in the Brazilian Amazon and more outside.
Anthropologists are concerned for the group's welfare as such isolated tribes have been known to succumb to diseases like flu and whooping cough their body is not protected against. Between 1983 and 1985, almost half of another population was wiped out owing to illnesses contracted from loggers.
~snip~
The Camisea gas project, being carried out by three major companies from Argentina, the US and Spain, will involve detonating thousands of explosive charges, drilling exploratory wells and importing hundreds of workers into an area where these tribes now live in isolation.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/isolated-amazonian-tribe-reaches-out-help-1456452
(My emphasis.)