Episode #446 from 1:07:51

Uncontacted tribes

I really love that, and I really appreciate that you're saying that. One of the fascinating things about just the Amazon to me is that there's still a large number of uncontacted tribes. To rewind back into ancient history, you can imagine all of these tribes that existed in the Amazon that were isolated, very distinct from each other. Can you speak to this, your understanding of these tribes and their history that are still here today? Well, a lot of them are these... By uncontacted, we mean we don't know anything about these guys. We know roughly where they are, but places like Ecuador have very responsible policies where no one's allowed to go contact them. So we have a dearth of information. If they walk out of the jungle and talk to us, that's one thing, but we don't go out and there looking for them, but they do seem frozen in time, and I don't think any of us have a good estimation of how long they've been like that. But we were saying earlier that humans change based on pressures of their environment. Mother necessity is oftentimes how we invent things or why we change, it's pressure. And one thing the Amazon is, once you figure out how not to die in it, it's a paradise of food. Food's fallen from the sky all the time there, and once you learn to adapt to that environment, you've got very little need. There's no pressure to make anything else. Things are working.

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I really love that, and I really appreciate that you're saying that. One of the fascinating things about just the Amazon to me is that there's still a large number of uncontacted tribes. To rewind back into ancient history, you can imagine all of these tribes that existed in the Amazon that were isolated, very distinct from each other. Can you speak to this, your understanding of these tribes and their history that are still here today? Well, a lot of them are these... By uncontacted, we mean we don't know anything about these guys. We know roughly where they are, but places like Ecuador have very responsible policies where no one's allowed to go contact them. So we have a dearth of information. If they walk out of the jungle and talk to us, that's one thing, but we don't go out and there looking for them, but they do seem frozen in time, and I don't think any of us have a good estimation of how long they've been like that. But we were saying earlier that humans change based on pressures of their environment. Mother necessity is oftentimes how we invent things or why we change, it's pressure. And one thing the Amazon is, once you figure out how not to die in it, it's a paradise of food. Food's fallen from the sky all the time there, and once you learn to adapt to that environment, you've got very little need. There's no pressure to make anything else. Things are working.

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Uncontacted tribes chapter timestamp | Ed Barnhart: Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Lost Civilizations of South America | EpisodeIndex