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December 10, 2009 at 12:09 AM #493385December 10, 2009 at 5:51 AM #492528ArrayaParticipant
[quote=scaredycat]http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/12/hadza/finkel-text
really neat article on a very rare group in tanzania that never abandonned hunter-gatherer lifestyle despite some contact with nearby farmers.. available in this month’s NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (my kid brought it to me!) or online also..male/female relations are quite a bit different than our assumptions…[/quote]
They grow no food, raise no livestock, and live without rules or calendars.
Anthropologists have estimated that they “work”—actively pursue food—four to six hours a day
People sleep whenever they want. Some stay up much of the night and doze during the heat of the day.
I bet if they had oil under their land they would hate us for our freedoms. haha
There are no wedding ceremonies. A couple that sleeps at the same fire for a while may eventually refer to themselves as married. Most of the Hadza I met, men and women alike, were serial monogamists, changing spouses every few years
A significant number of Hadza women who marry out of the group soon return, unwilling to accept bullying treatment
“Traditional” relationships
. Life ain’t nothing but bitches and money
-Easy-EDecember 10, 2009 at 5:51 AM #492689ArrayaParticipant[quote=scaredycat]http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/12/hadza/finkel-text
really neat article on a very rare group in tanzania that never abandonned hunter-gatherer lifestyle despite some contact with nearby farmers.. available in this month’s NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (my kid brought it to me!) or online also..male/female relations are quite a bit different than our assumptions…[/quote]
They grow no food, raise no livestock, and live without rules or calendars.
Anthropologists have estimated that they “work”—actively pursue food—four to six hours a day
People sleep whenever they want. Some stay up much of the night and doze during the heat of the day.
I bet if they had oil under their land they would hate us for our freedoms. haha
There are no wedding ceremonies. A couple that sleeps at the same fire for a while may eventually refer to themselves as married. Most of the Hadza I met, men and women alike, were serial monogamists, changing spouses every few years
A significant number of Hadza women who marry out of the group soon return, unwilling to accept bullying treatment
“Traditional” relationships
. Life ain’t nothing but bitches and money
-Easy-EDecember 10, 2009 at 5:51 AM #493074ArrayaParticipant[quote=scaredycat]http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/12/hadza/finkel-text
really neat article on a very rare group in tanzania that never abandonned hunter-gatherer lifestyle despite some contact with nearby farmers.. available in this month’s NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (my kid brought it to me!) or online also..male/female relations are quite a bit different than our assumptions…[/quote]
They grow no food, raise no livestock, and live without rules or calendars.
Anthropologists have estimated that they “work”—actively pursue food—four to six hours a day
People sleep whenever they want. Some stay up much of the night and doze during the heat of the day.
I bet if they had oil under their land they would hate us for our freedoms. haha
There are no wedding ceremonies. A couple that sleeps at the same fire for a while may eventually refer to themselves as married. Most of the Hadza I met, men and women alike, were serial monogamists, changing spouses every few years
A significant number of Hadza women who marry out of the group soon return, unwilling to accept bullying treatment
“Traditional” relationships
. Life ain’t nothing but bitches and money
-Easy-EDecember 10, 2009 at 5:51 AM #493162ArrayaParticipant[quote=scaredycat]http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/12/hadza/finkel-text
really neat article on a very rare group in tanzania that never abandonned hunter-gatherer lifestyle despite some contact with nearby farmers.. available in this month’s NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (my kid brought it to me!) or online also..male/female relations are quite a bit different than our assumptions…[/quote]
They grow no food, raise no livestock, and live without rules or calendars.
Anthropologists have estimated that they “work”—actively pursue food—four to six hours a day
People sleep whenever they want. Some stay up much of the night and doze during the heat of the day.
I bet if they had oil under their land they would hate us for our freedoms. haha
There are no wedding ceremonies. A couple that sleeps at the same fire for a while may eventually refer to themselves as married. Most of the Hadza I met, men and women alike, were serial monogamists, changing spouses every few years
A significant number of Hadza women who marry out of the group soon return, unwilling to accept bullying treatment
“Traditional” relationships
. Life ain’t nothing but bitches and money
-Easy-EDecember 10, 2009 at 5:51 AM #493400ArrayaParticipant[quote=scaredycat]http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/12/hadza/finkel-text
really neat article on a very rare group in tanzania that never abandonned hunter-gatherer lifestyle despite some contact with nearby farmers.. available in this month’s NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (my kid brought it to me!) or online also..male/female relations are quite a bit different than our assumptions…[/quote]
They grow no food, raise no livestock, and live without rules or calendars.
Anthropologists have estimated that they “work”—actively pursue food—four to six hours a day
People sleep whenever they want. Some stay up much of the night and doze during the heat of the day.
I bet if they had oil under their land they would hate us for our freedoms. haha
There are no wedding ceremonies. A couple that sleeps at the same fire for a while may eventually refer to themselves as married. Most of the Hadza I met, men and women alike, were serial monogamists, changing spouses every few years
A significant number of Hadza women who marry out of the group soon return, unwilling to accept bullying treatment
“Traditional” relationships
. Life ain’t nothing but bitches and money
-Easy-EDecember 10, 2009 at 6:52 AM #492533scaredyclassicParticipantdefinitely check out the photo gallery attached to that article.
December 10, 2009 at 6:52 AM #492694scaredyclassicParticipantdefinitely check out the photo gallery attached to that article.
December 10, 2009 at 6:52 AM #493079scaredyclassicParticipantdefinitely check out the photo gallery attached to that article.
December 10, 2009 at 6:52 AM #493167scaredyclassicParticipantdefinitely check out the photo gallery attached to that article.
December 10, 2009 at 6:52 AM #493405scaredyclassicParticipantdefinitely check out the photo gallery attached to that article.
December 10, 2009 at 8:34 AM #492582NotCrankyParticipanthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCPEBM5ol0Q I like the hygiene options with this lifestyle a little better.Don’t know how much they work per day. Their diet is terrible.Who the hell eats flowers? The grown or nearly grown children could probably have careers that their peers have if they wanted to pursue them. No disrespect intended to the very cool hunter gatherers.
December 10, 2009 at 8:34 AM #492745NotCrankyParticipanthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCPEBM5ol0Q I like the hygiene options with this lifestyle a little better.Don’t know how much they work per day. Their diet is terrible.Who the hell eats flowers? The grown or nearly grown children could probably have careers that their peers have if they wanted to pursue them. No disrespect intended to the very cool hunter gatherers.
December 10, 2009 at 8:34 AM #493129NotCrankyParticipanthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCPEBM5ol0Q I like the hygiene options with this lifestyle a little better.Don’t know how much they work per day. Their diet is terrible.Who the hell eats flowers? The grown or nearly grown children could probably have careers that their peers have if they wanted to pursue them. No disrespect intended to the very cool hunter gatherers.
December 10, 2009 at 8:34 AM #493217NotCrankyParticipanthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCPEBM5ol0Q I like the hygiene options with this lifestyle a little better.Don’t know how much they work per day. Their diet is terrible.Who the hell eats flowers? The grown or nearly grown children could probably have careers that their peers have if they wanted to pursue them. No disrespect intended to the very cool hunter gatherers.
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