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・ Andaman Kadhali
・ Andaman masked owl
・ Andaman nightjar
・ Andaman rat
・ Andaman scops owl
・ Andaman Sea
・ Andaman serpent eagle
・ Andaman shama
・ Andaman shrew
・ Andaman spiny shrew
・ Andaman teal
・ Andaman treepie
・ Andaman wood pigeon
・ Andaman woodpecker
・ Andamanese languages
Andamanese people
・ Andamarca
・ Andamarca (Oruro)
・ Andamarca District
・ Andamej
・ Andamento
・ Andami
・ Andamia
・ Andamia amphibius
・ Andamia heteroptera
・ Andamia reyi
・ Andamia tetradactylus
・ Andamina Jeevitam
・ Andamion Murataj
・ Andamiro


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Andamanese people : ウィキペディア英語版
Andamanese people

The Andamanese people are the various aboriginal inhabitants of the Andaman Islands, a district of India located in the southeastern part of the Bay of Bengal.
The Andamanese resemble other Negrito groups in Southeast Asia. They are pygmies, and are the only modern people outside of certain parts of Sub-Saharan Africa with steatopygia. They lead a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and appear to have lived in substantial isolation for thousands of years. The Andamanese are believed to be descended from the migrations which, about 70,000 years ago, brought the first modern humans out of Africa to the Andaman Islands.
By the end of the eighteenth century, when they first came into sustained contact with outsiders, there were an estimated 7,000 Andamanese divided into five major groups, with distinct cultures, separate domains, and mutually unintelligible languages. In the next century they were largely wiped out by diseases, violence, and loss of territory. Today, there remain only approximately 400–450 Andamanese. One group has long been extinct, and only two of the remaining groups still maintain a steadfast independence, refusing most attempts at contact by outsiders.
The Andamanese are a designated Scheduled Tribe.
==Tribes==

The five major groups of Andamanese found by the European colonists were:
* Great Andamanese, extinct 54 admixed Individuals 〔
* Jarawa now estimated 250 to 400 verified to exist in pure form
* Jangil or ''Rutland Jarawa'', extinct〔
* Onge, now fewer than 100 verified to exist in pure form
* Sentinelese, now estimated to be 100 to 200.
Jarawa and Onge are dominated by y-dna haplogroup D which is native to the Andamanese.
By the end of the eighteenth century, there were an estimated 5,000 Great Andamanese living on Great Andaman. Altogether they comprised ten distinct tribes with different languages. The population quickly dwindled until they went extinct in pure form, and had a low of 19 admixed individuals by 1961. It has increased slowly after that, following their move to a reservation on Strait Island. By January 2011, there were only 54 admixed individuals from three tribes, who spoke mostly Hindi.〔(Anosh Malekar, "The case for a linguisitic survey," ''Infochange Media,'' August 1, 2011. )〕
The Jarawa originally inhabited southeastern Jarawa Island and have migrated to the west coast of Great Andaman in the wake of the Great Andamanese. The Onge once lived throughout Little Andaman and now are confined to two reservations on the island. The Jangil, who originally inhabited Rutland Island, were extinct by 1931; the last individual was sighted in 1907. Only the Sentinelese are still living in their original homeland on North Sentinel Island, largely undisturbed, and have fiercely resisted all attempts at contact.
The tribe members of the Jarawa tribe focused on traditional knowledge.Traditional knowledge was a huge part of their culture. This referred to those who learned through observations and experiences when it came to identifying the relationship between different organisms and environmental resource areas. Their way of life is interwoven with the traditional knowledge of a group.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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