By Sadie Whitelocks for MailOnline. An explorer has unearthed an incredible set of photos he took of a meeting he had with an isolated tribe deep in the Ecuadorian rainforest — the event being the first time they had made contact with the outside world. He told MailOnline Travel that he discovered the images on film slides while sifting through belongings in his loft during the lockdown and decided to get them digitalised.

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Brazil's indigenous affairs agency Funai renewed a protection order on Friday for the ,hectare ,acre area in western Mato Grosso state. But the renewed protection will last just six months, unlike the three-year extensions granted for the territory since The Piripkura's fate has become a test of indigenous rights under far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, who has criticized reservations for giving too much land to too few people and blocking the expansion of mining and farming. Indigenous rights advocates had pressed for a three-year extension as in previous renewals. Advocate group Survival International called it a "stay of execution" by the government to gauge reactions before ending the protection altogether. The office of Brazil's public prosecutor urged the government to renew protection orders that are about to expire for four groups of indigenous people. It said Brazil is the South American country with the largest number of indigenous people living voluntarily in isolation, with groups sighted. Federal prosecutor Ricardo Pael, who has been seeking a court-ordered extension in Mato Grosso, said it should be renewed until a final decision on making the Piripkura an official tribal reservation is taken by Funai. Unshaven, long-haired and naked, they quickly disappear back into the forest, where other Piripkura are believed to live.
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The group of men are believed to be natives of Peru but they were filmed in northern Brazil on the banks of the Envira River which runs near the Peruvian border. The encounter took place within the last two weeks, but the video was released today by the Brazilian indigenous authority FUNAI. The tribal men are naked except for belts and loincloths and carry different weapons, including bows and arrows and spears in the 8-minute video. A few of the tribal men are seen with markings on their faces and they all have styled their dark black hair in a similar bowl-cut fashion. At one point one of the men blatantly steals a machete-type knife while another takes an ax from a settlement, despite shouts of protest by the villagers.
An isolated tribesman in the remote jungles of Brazil prepares to launch an arrow at a low-flying helicopter last week. Aerial photographs of an isolated tribe in the Brazilian rain forest are yielding a sensational new look at a Neolithic way of life that has all but disappeared from the face of the Earth. The high-resolution images, taken from a helicopter last week by Brazilian photographer Ricardo Stuckert , offer an unprecedented glimpse of a vibrant indigenous community living in complete isolation in the depths of the Amazon jungle.