National Geographic Kids USA - September 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

THINGS


GLENN BARTLEY / GETTY IMAGES (1); TONIFLAP / GETTY IMAGES (3); SERGEY SKLEZNEV / DREAMSTIME (4); CLAUDIO CONTRERAS /NPL / MINDEN PICTURES (5); KEITH LEVIT / GETTY IMAGES (7); DESIGN PICS INC / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE (8);
FLPA / JAMES LOWEN / AGE FOTOSTOCK (12); ANDREW M. ALLPORT / SHUTTERSTOCK (13); PPART / GETTY IMAGES (15)

7

11

10

6

2

12

5

24


14

8

13

9

The Tzeltal-Mayan
people in Mexico
use beetle wings
as jewelry.

The Tlingit
of North
America’s
Pacific
Northwest
region
carve
totem
poles that
are as high
as 40 feet
to honor
ancestors.

THE OLDEST
AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL
BOOMERANGS—WHICH
WERE USED FOR
HUNTING—ARE
10 , 000 YEARS OLD.

Brazil’s Matis people
have a ritual to honor
large rodents called
capybaras.

The Amazon rain forest’s
Awá people keep parakeets as pets.

The Tucuna of South America
carve ceremonial masks
in the shape of jaguars.

By spraying
bee-repelling sap
onto hives, India’s
Jarawa people draw
away the insects
so they can
extract
honey.

MANGOESARE AN
IMPORTANTSOURCE
OF FOODFOR THE
BAKA PEOPLEOF
CAMEROON.

In 2012 SCIENTISTS
in Guatemala
UNEARTHED the
JEWEL-FILLED TOMB of a
MAYA WARRIOR QUEEN
namedLADY K’ABEL.

SOME MODERN-DAY
MEDICINES HAVE
INGREDIENTS FIRST
FOUND AND USED BY
RAIN FOREST CULTURES.

15
Starting around
the 10th century,
people built over a
thousand pagodas
(or temples) in
a jungle in the
Asian country
of Myanmar.

Some
of the Penan
people in the
countries
of Malaysia
and Brunei
move their
settlements
about once a
month.

THE KAYAPO
OF BRAZIL MAKE
HUNTING SPEAR TIPS
WITH SHARP
STINGRAY SPINES.

In 2015,
12th-century city
ruins were found
hidden in the jungles
of Cambodia.

(^3) Ecuador’s
Waorani
people ca
anaconda
with bare
hands as
a test of
strength.
ptur
s
p
h.
J
e
Special
Issue

Free download pdf