RM2T4660H–Venezuela; Amazonas State: communal house of Piaroa indigenous people (endonym:.Wothiha) among banana trees.The Wothiha are one of the largest ethnic
RM2T40685–Piaroa (endonym: Wothiha, Wo’tiheh, Wotuha) indigenous woman inserting small stones on board to make manioc (cassava) grater. Guiana Highlands, Venezuela, South America. The Wothiha are one of the largest ethnic groups of Venezuela, numbering about 14,000. They speak a Salivan language. Part of their territory has been invaded by illegal miners and Colombian guerillas. This picture shows a craft no longer practiced by the Wothiha, as, according to anthropologist Stanford Zent who studied them 15 years later they now use mechanized manioc graters
RMFJF8NF–Churuata at Caroni River
RM2J42BTD–Piaroa Indian. The Piaroa people, Huottüja or De'aruhua, are a pre-Columbian South American indigenous ethnic group of the middle Orinoco Basin in present-day Colombia and Venezuela. South America. Voyage of exploration through New Granada and Venezuela by Jules Crevaux 1880-1881. Le Tour du Monde 1882
RMF03R03–Venezuela - Guayana - Amazonas - Cerro Autana (1208 meters), the sacred mountains of the Piaroa Indians, declared natural monument in 1978.
RMP56B8B–Piaroa's ceremonial masks: Spirit of the Forest (Redyo), monkey and Peccary mask. 1960. Venezuela. Ethnographic Museum. Budapest. Hungary.
RM2J2FYKP–Piaroa Indian. The Piaroa people, Huottüja or De'aruhua, are a pre-Columbian South American indigenous ethnic group of the middle Orinoco Basin in present-day Colombia and Venezuela. South America. Voyage of exploration through New Granada and Venezuela by Jules Crevaux 1880-1881. Le Tour du Monde 1882
RMP56B8C–Piaroa's ceremonial masks: Spirit of the Forest (Redyo), monkey and Peccary mask. 1960. Venezuela. Ethnographic Museum. Budapest. Hungary.
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