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December 21, 2024 from 12pm to 5pm – The Firehouse CCCADI
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"It's phenomenal that Denisovan ancestry made it all the way to South America," says John Lindo, Ph.D., a co-corresponding author of the article who specializes in ancient DNA analysis and is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Emory University. "The admixture must have occurred a long time before, perhaps 40,000 years ago. The fact that the Denisovan lineage persisted, and its genetic signal made it into an ancient individual from Uruguay that is only 1,500 years old suggests that it was a large admixture event between a population of humans and Denisovans." As well, Polynesian and Oceanic genome signals have been shown to be present in the regions under study.
Apart from the occurrence of mass burials in the sites that yielded the samples from northeast Brazil, Uruguay, southeast Brazil and Panama, there is no other current evidence in the archaeological record that indicates shared cultural features among them. Importantly, the analyzed ancient individuals from southeast Brazil are in excess of 10,000 years older than those from northeast Brazil, Uruguay and Panama.
Campelo dos Santos discusses: • The mystery of settlement in South America • Coastal movements potentially linking ancient Uruguay and Panama • Surprising results in the genome.Comment
To immerse in the context: needless to say, The Buriti Flower, which was shot over 15 months in four villages within the Kraholândia reservation — the area in the state of Tocantins that’s been allotted to the Krahô — takes the viewer way beyond a through-Western-eyes documentation and interpretation.
Even the screenwriting duties were shared w/three locals, two of them central on-screen figures.
THE FLOWER OF BURITI by João Salaviza and Renée Nader Messora, premieres worldwide at the Cannes Festival - Un Certain Regard, with national premiere on March 14, 2024 & Apache Desforra distribution.
Bolsonarism was a real (and still on-going) massacre, both in the destruction of peoples and their rights, and of the land. Now what is emerging is a much more beautiful and stronger counteroffensive -- that the world can be aware of with the Krahô. It's always good & hopeful for filmmakers and allies to see the place film can take an audience.
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