A  Brazilian Indian tribe armed with bows and arrows and unseen for years has been  spotted in a remote Amazon region where clashes with illegal loggers are  threatening its existence.
The tiny Jururei tribe numbers only 8 or 10, and is the second "uncontacted"  group to be threatened by loggers this month, after a judge approved cutting in  an area of the jungle called Rio Pardo. Accelerating rainforest destruction  threatens the tribes. Deforestation in 2003-04 totaled 10,088 square miles, the  most in nearly a decade, official figures show.
"The Indians have had conflict with loggers, who are cutting toward them  from two different directions," Rogerio Vargas Motta, director of the  Pacaas Novos national park, told Reuters.
He photographed Jururei huts on a recent helicopter flyover of the remote park  to catch land grabbers. One Jururei shot three arrows at the helicopter as it  flew overhead, Vargas Motta said.
Can you imagine the courage it takes for a Stone Age man to try to fight a noisy, vicious-looking helicopter rather than to run into the bush and hide?
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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