Satellite images find uncontacted Amazonian tribe

By on 12 July, 2011
 
Satellite images have uncovered an ancient, uncontacted tribe deep in the Amazon rainforest.
 
Fabricio Amorim, a regional co-ordinator for Brazil's indigenous foundation, Funai (http://www.survivalinternational.org/about/funai), said the indigenous community had been found after three small forest clearings were detected on satellite images.
 
Flyovers were carried out in April, confirming the community's existence. The flyovers took images revealing four small straw-roofed huts surrounded by thick jungle.
 
Funai believes the community is likely to house around 200 people, and that they are likely from the Pano linguistic group, which straddles the border between Peru, Brazil, and Bolivia.
 
This tribe will join the list of 14 other officially recognised uncontacted tribes living in the Amazon, totalling around 2,000 people. Government officials avoid direct contact with tribes, preferring to maintain their safety from afar. However, the risk of external threats is growing.
 
"Among the main threats to the well-being of these groups are illegal fishing, hunting, logging, mining, cattle ranching, missionary actions… and drug trafficking," Fabricio said. Oil exploration over the border in Peru could also have a negative impact on indigenous tribes in region.

You may also like to read:



Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

New Zealand’s Basemaps now available in 3D
The new 3D function has been formed through overlaying high-...
Interview with hydrographer, Jasbir Randhawa
Looking back on his 30 years of career accomplishments with ...
AICRAFT to test AI-enabled synthetic aperture radar
Called ‘Leoflect,’ the project has received $100,000 in ...
Drones employed for mapping national ecosystem
The Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network is conducting a n...
Tuvalu on its way to creating a full digital twin
Drones and street cameras have been used to map Tuvalu’s c...
Set-out at scale with HP SitePrint
HP SitePrint from Aptella automatically prints plans directl...