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#14
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04-09-2010, 03:08 PM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:13517 Join Date: Jan 2010 Posts: 7 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 0 Post(s)
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Re: Uncontacted Tribe Photographed in Brazil (May 2008) Debunked HOAX
I saw the same subject matter at the time and the photo was taken by a photographer in a heli. A few weeks later the contents of the photos came out. They are not of a contacted tribe. The area in where these people live is protected by the government. They talked about a few of the tribes in that area. Im not sure of the uncontacted tribes but i do know that this was a publicity stunt by the photographer.
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#18
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04-12-2010, 04:48 PM
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Re: Uncontacted Tribe Photographed in Brazil (May 2008) Debunked HOAX
ITS A FAKE!! THEY PROVED IT. THE PHOTOGRAPHER WAS BUSTED...Recent photos of an "uncontacted tribe" of Indians near the Brazil-Peru border have sparked media reports of a hoax, but the organization that released the images defends its claims and actions. The photographs, which showed men painted red and black and aiming arrows skyward, were released in late May by Survival International, a London-based organization that advocates for tribal people worldwide. The release stated that "members of one of the world's last uncontacted tribes have been spotted and photographed from the air," and quoted the Brazilian government photographer saying, "there are some who doubt [the tribe's] existence" as justification for flying over the site and taking the pictures. Some of the media published the images at the time with stories saying the tribe previously had been "lost." In fact, a LiveScience column stated that the tribe had "escaped discovery" until the new photos came out. This week, suspicions about the organization's motivations and the authenticity of the scene were raised. On June 22, The Observer, a London-based newspaper, ran a story, "Secret of the 'lost' tribe that wasn't," saying that the tribe's existence "has been noted since 1910." A succession of other stories followed on the Web, claiming that reports of the tribe's discovery were a hoax. |