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Indigenous peoples of South America have been involved a several wars of different scale and nature.
Guaraní are a group of culturally related indigenous peoples of South America.
Indigenous peoples of South America employ a wide variety of entheogens.
Indigenous peoples of South America exploited this species for millennia and by Europeans around the 16th century.
Recent commercial cultivation currently uses pre-Columbian stocks created by the indigenous peoples of South America.
What about the vast documented historical evidence that many indigenous peoples of South America used natural plants perfectly safely and part of a ritual?
This plant probably has been in cultivation since prehistoric times by the Indigenous peoples of South America and Mesoamerica.
Indigenous peoples of South America traditionally use annatto, huito, or wet charcoal to decorate their faces and bodies.
The indigenous peoples of South America have used U. tomentosa for medicinal purposes for two thousand years or more.
Naturally colored cotton today mostly comes from pre-Columbian stocks created by the indigenous peoples of South America (Vreeland, 1999).
He found himself trying to remember something Charlie had told him about a poison the indigenous peoples of South America used, but couldn't get his thoughts to coalesce.
Greg Urban is an American anthropologist who specializes in indigenous peoples of South America and on general theoretical problems in linguistic and cultural anthropology.
This six-volume series, with an additional index volume, documents information about Indigenous peoples of South America, including cultural and physical aspects of the people, language family, history, and prehistory.
Notable examples are the poisons secreted from the skin of the poison dart frog and curare (or 'ampi'), a general term for a range of plant-derived arrow poisons used by the indigenous peoples of South America.
Indeed, haplogroup Q-M242 has been found in approximately 94% of Indigenous peoples of South America and detected in Na-Dené speakers at a rate of 25-50%, and North American Eskimo-Aleut populations at about 46%.
While at Cambridge, Kennedy produced three documentary films on the indigenous peoples of South America allowing her to later consult with both the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and ITV in Great Britain.
For differentiation, potatoes are called batata-inglesa (literally, "English potato"), a name used in other regions and sociolects to differentiate it from the batata-doce, "sweet potato", ironic names since both were first cultivated by the indigenous peoples of South America, native to this continent, and only later introduced in Europe by the colonizers.