Of those fifteen per cent who did have some experience many had only worked as farm labourers, gardeners, station hands, dairymen or bushmen. |
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Bushmen state that armed game wardens and other government officials have confiscated their animals and forbidden them to hunt or collect food. |
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The Kung Bushmen of the Kalahari revere the praying mantis as a divine messenger. |
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Tribal people like the Aborigines, Amerindians and Bushmen are the heirs to all the richness and diversity of the natural world. |
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Enough food should be supplied to the Bushmen to last until the next harvest season. |
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On this nine-day safari, you'll tag along with Bushmen on their daily hunting-and-gathering forays. |
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Life inside the reserve is harsh, as the Bushmen are banned from hunting, gathering and collecting firewood. |
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Ben also called for support for the struggle of the country's Bushmen, presently facing extermination in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. |
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They are desperate to return to their land in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, where Bushmen lived for thousands of years. |
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The stories I've shot are as diverse as the Hawaiian Extinction Crisis to the fate of southern Africa's Bushmen. |
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Omaheke is traditionally Herero, Tswana and Bushmen country, but most of the land is used by big cattle farms. |
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The average daily calorific intake of the Bushmen women seems to be about 1100 calories. |
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For thousands of years the Bushmen chewed on the hoodia as an appetite suppressant on long journeys across the desert. |
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Home of the Bushmen, the arid reaches of the Kalahari has some spectacularly wild and remote game viewing areas. |
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This is as true for an anthropologist studying the Nuer, the Bushmen, or Trobriand Islanders as for a historian who must decide what period to study. |
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For example, in South Africa mopane worms are eaten by the bushmen, and in China silkworms are considered a delicacy. |
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The Bushmen, or Khoisan, or hunter-gatherer Khoi, were a physically similar but culturally distinct people who lived contiguously with the Khoikhoi. |
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These two ethnic groups, who share the same language, together with their cousins, the Bushmen, form the Khoisan peoples, the original inhabitants of Southern Africa. |
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Further south in Botswana, the famous Bushmen of the Kalahari desert are being moved out of the reserve where they have ranged free for centuries. |
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Sesana and Gakelebone, along with two Bushmen from South Africa and other supporters accompanying them, plan to meet with Congressional leaders and visit the UN next month. |
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Lesotho was originally inhabited by the Bushmen who roamed southern Africa, as evidenced by the Bushmen drawings and paintings in the river gorges. |
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The area is believed to have been inhabited originally by ethnic groups using a click-tongue language similar to that of Southern Africa's Bushmen. |
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Long ago, local bushmen had discovered that the needlelike leaves of the Aspalathus linearis bush made a tasty, aromatic brew. |
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We who are Bushmen, were once springbucks, and the Mantis shot us, and we really cried. |
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This unique herb has been used by the native Khoisan bushmen as a natural remedy to cure all sorts of ailments ranging from infantile colic to asthma. |
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Ray Mears is an explorer and survivalist, who has met headhunters deep in the Indonesian rainforest, bushmen in Namibia and the Evenk people of Siberia. |
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To A. B. Paterson, son of a dispossessed squatter, writing from a city office, the bushmen with their horses and simple skills were the backbone of Australia. |
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For more than three centuries, the Bushmen and Khoikhoi of South Africa have been infusing rooibos leaves and stems for the plant's health benefits and healing properties. |
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The native Khoisan people, which include members of the Bushmen and Khoikhoi ethnic groups, have used rooibos infusions as a natural remedy to cure many ailments. |
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