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  2. In the Amazon, Indigenous women bring a tiny tribe back from ...

    www.aol.com/news/amazon-indigenous-women-bring...

    Women grind cassava into flour, manually, preserving scarce fuel for the generators at night. Others are out hunting. ... a disease introduced in the Amazon by non-Indigenous people. In 1998, as ...

  3. Nemonte Nenquimo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemonte_Nenquimo

    Nemonte Nenquimo is an Indigenous activist, author and member of the Waorani Nation from the Amazonian Region of Ecuador.She is the first female president of the Waorani of Pastaza (CONCONAWEP), co-founder of the Indigenous-led nonprofit organization Ceibo Alliance, and co-founder of the nonprofit Amazon Frontlines, which works to protect the Amazon rainforest, protect its biodiversity, and ...

  4. Yanomami women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanomami_women

    The demand for women outweighs the actual population of the Yanomami women because of the growing practice of polygamy. [ citation needed ] A girl can be promised to a man at an age as young as five or six, however cannot officially be married off until after her first menstrual period. [ 6 ]

  5. Gender roles among the Indigenous peoples of North America

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_roles_among_the...

    Traditional Apache gender roles have many of the same skills learned by both females and males. All children traditionally learn how to cook, follow tracks, skin leather, sew stitches, ride horses, and use weapons. [2] Typically, women gather vegetation such as fruits, roots, and seeds. Women would often prepare the food.

  6. Yanomami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanomami

    The ethnonym Yanomami was produced by anthropologists based on the word yanõmami, which, in the expression yanõmami thëpë, signifies "human beings."This expression is opposed to the categories yaro (game animals) and yai (invisible or nameless beings), but also napë (enemy, stranger, non-indigenous).

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  8. Tupi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupi_people

    The Tupi people, a subdivision of the Tupi-Guarani linguistic families, were one of the largest groups of indigenous peoples in Brazil before its colonization. Scholars believe that while they first settled in the Amazon rainforest, from about 2,900 years ago the Tupi started to migrate southward and gradually occupied the Atlantic coast of Southeast Brazil.

  9. Pira-tapuya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pira-tapuya

    The Pira-tapuya, or variations like Pira-Tapuia, Piratapuyo, etc., or Tapuya (Tucano: Wa’îkɨ̃hɨ) [1] for short, are an indigenous people of the Amazon regions. They live along the Vaupés River in Colombia and in the state of Amazonas , Brazil.