| ETHNIC GROUPS |
According to researches, it is been said that humans first reached South America about 15.000 to 20.000 years ago (some archeologists go as far as 40.000 years ago). The theories say that people walked from the North, after crossing the Bering Strait, or sailed from the south pacific islands.
Approximately 60 years
after, the Spaniards conquered Cuzco, the capital of the Inca Empire.
After the fall of the Tiwanaco Culture in the 13th century, for about
two centuries, many Aymara small kingdoms occupied the lands yet never
united to form one empire. Instead, they operated under a commercial network
until the Incas invaded them in the 15th century. The Incas re-conquered
most of the old Tiwanacu empire traveling as south as the Atacama desert
but didn't had time enough to explore and expand their empire but anyway
they have been very often wrongly accredited for most of the trails and
other constructions previously built by other cultures.
Some countries like: Chile and Argentina give the general name of Mestizos to anyone who is not completely white, making almost all their native people to be called so. Some of the Native Indians still living on these lands are found in the following list: |
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to Resources Mountains & Highlands Valleys Cloud forest & Amazon basin Gran Chaco plains Pacific coastline & Islands |
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| Mountains and Highlands |
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Live in the area of Puno in Peru, La Paz; Oruro and Part of Potosi in Bolivia, and the north of Chile. Speak Aymara, Spanish, and local dialects AYMARA, URU (URUQUELLAS, CHIPAYA, MURATO, HIRUITO, LLIPI) Exceptionally QUECHUA speaking people live in Apolobamba mountain range KALLAWATAS |
| Valleys |
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Mainly QUECHUA who live in a great part of Peru, and Part of Oruro, Potosi, Chuquisaca and Cochabamba in Bolivia |
| Cloud forest and Amazon basin |
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The MOSETEN and LECOS, are found on the cloud forest and also in the Amazon. Jungle tribes who still keep their traditions and familiar ties. ARAONA, AYOREO, BAURE, CANICHANA, CAYUBABA, CHACOBO, CHIMAN, CHIQUITANO, ESE EJJA, GUARAYO, ITONAMA, MCHINERI, MOVIMA, MOXEÑO, NAHUA , PAICONECA, PACAHUARA, SIROIONO, TACANA, TOROMONA, YAMINAHUA, YURACARE, AND YUQUI. |
| Gran Chaco plains |
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TAPIETE AND WEENAYEK, keep the Guarani as their language, and were thought to be nomads, living like that even in the middle of the last century, the truth is that they had to live escaping from hunters who still considered slavery an option for cheap working force. |
| Pacific coastline & Islands |
Although most of the population in Chile is white or European-decendent, there are still small ethnic groups to be found in its territory. To the north decendents of the Aymaras populate the highlands and the lower slopes of the volcanic range.
Some Mapuche (also called Araucanos by the Spaniards) descendants live in Chiloe island and some regions in mainland.
Papa Nui indigenous still live in Easter island.
Today extint other ethnic
groups inhabitated these lands: the Chonos who lived in small islands at the
south and traveled between them using their canoes. The Tewelches (Aonikenk)
also called "Patagones" by the spaniards; very tall nonadic and hunters
who left paintings in several caves. The Yamanas and the Kaweskar (Alacalufes)
were also nomadic marines.