Vicuña wool is the most expensive animal fiber in the world. The Aymara…
Niède
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
View on the Pragda STREAM site
At 85 years old, the Brazilian archaeologist Niéde Guidon looks back on a career that included the discovery of cave drawings in the south of Piauí State and established a new theory on the arrival of man on the American continent.
The documentary reconstructs the journey of the first men in this region of Brazil, revealing the face of this prehistoric man - hunter and gatherer, and the contemporary local man - farmer, forester, potter, park ranger, hunter, rancher, miner. Countryside. The primitive and the current. Yesterday and today.
When talking about memory and legacy, the film makes the viewer wonder if the permanence of this treasure of rock painting and everything that was developed to preserve it will resist time and the disappearance of Niéde, as the paintings on the rocks resisted thousands of years and the changes that have occurred over that time.
Citation
Main credits
Tambelli, Tiago (film director)
Tambelli, Tiago (screenwriter)
Consonni, Eduardo (screenwriter)
Pessoa, André (film producer)
Other credits
Cinematography, Jacques Cheuiche, Tiago Tambelli; editing, Eduardo Consoni, Rodrigo T. Marques; music, Edson Secco.
Distributor subjects
Anthropology; South America; Women; Latin American Studies; Science + Technology; Activism; Education; Visual ArtsKeywords
00:06:29.130 --> 00:06:30.180
– Ask her to leave.
00:06:30.200 --> 00:06:32.500
– I saw Isa coming here now, I'll ask her...
00:06:33.710 --> 00:06:36.520
– When Isa is downstairs, I'll ask her to hand it to...
00:06:36.729 --> 00:06:38.731
– To Sileide.
00:06:38.731 --> 00:06:40.000
– Perfect.
00:06:40.733 --> 00:06:42.735
– I also have few things...
00:06:42.735 --> 00:06:43.450
– Ok.
00:06:44.500 --> 00:06:45.446
– Anything you need, I'll be there.
00:06:52.300 --> 00:06:53.300
– Dear, how are you?
00:06:54.080 --> 00:06:56.749
– Hi. I’ve got it already,
thank you very much, huh!?
00:06:56.749 --> 00:07:02.797
– Well, Gabi, have you gone through
that article I've sent you from the Spanish guy?
00:07:05.400 --> 00:07:08.200
– Oh, I haven’t.
00:07:09.300 --> 00:07:12.890
– But, I am sure to have sent you the article!
00:07:15.935 --> 00:07:20.565
– Take a look at it, because
it's something really,... really,..... really…
00:07:20.898 --> 00:07:26.279
...and he continues. The first American is a Siberian hunter...
00:07:26.279 --> 00:07:32.368
...that in the interglacial period came to the United States through strait of Bering.
00:07:32.368 --> 00:07:34.450
– No, no. It happens...
00:07:35.060 --> 00:07:37.000
– It happens that I wanted you to read,
00:07:37.081 --> 00:07:40.501
everything he wrote on it,
because there are some issues...
00:07:46.174 --> 00:07:51.387
In 1963, I worked at
the University of São Paulo
00:07:51.387 --> 00:07:54.515
at the Ipiranga Museum,
I organized an exhibition
00:07:54.515 --> 00:07:57.602
about cave paintings in Brazil
00:07:57.602 --> 00:08:00.980
and in that ocasion, the only ones
known were from Minas Gerais.
00:08:00.980 --> 00:08:06.527
So, someone who came to visit told me that...
It was on May 1963,
00:08:06.527 --> 00:08:10.531
that person asked to
talk to the one in charge
00:08:10.531 --> 00:08:13.201
I was called there, he
showed some pictures and said:
00:08:13.201 --> 00:08:17.205
"Look, very close to my town, there are
also these kinds of native indians drawings".
00:08:17.205 --> 00:08:20.000
I looked at the photos and noticed that the drawings were completely
00:08:20.030 --> 00:08:21.459
different from those found in Minas,
00:08:21.459 --> 00:08:25.379
and then I asked him where they
were from, then he gave me all information.
00:08:25.379 --> 00:08:29.717
On December I had vacations,
I got my car and came straight here.
00:08:29.759 --> 00:08:32.887
However, I couldn't go forward
because it had rained a lot
00:08:32.887 --> 00:08:36.182
and a bridge along São Francisco
River bridge had fallen, right!?
00:08:37.099 --> 00:08:40.478
I went back to São Paulo, on December 1963,
00:08:40.478 --> 00:08:44.398
right after in 1964 the Military came
and I had to go away to France.
00:08:46.317 --> 00:08:50.696
When the military seized the power,
what happened at the University of São Paulo
00:08:50.696 --> 00:08:56.930
was that a lot of people that tried the
career and didn’t succeed in the public exam,
00:08:57.500 --> 00:08:59.100
they gave in the seniors professors.
00:08:59.247 --> 00:09:00.410
And I was reported too.
00:09:00.780 --> 00:09:04.000
And the one who saved me was an aunt that told his friend
00:09:04.110 --> 00:09:05.586
that I would be arrested.
00:09:05.586 --> 00:09:09.048
That I had to “flee away” from Brazil that very day.
00:09:09.048 --> 00:09:11.926
So, on that same day, my aunt
got me inside a plane and I went away,
00:09:11.926 --> 00:09:15.250
leaving back my apartment here in São Paulo. Everything back!
00:09:15.280 --> 00:09:18.530
And then, in France, since I was a French’s dad daughter
00:09:18.660 --> 00:09:25.606
I have the French citzenship wich
allowed me to work as a professor in Paris.
00:09:26.315 --> 00:09:29.694
There was a time that she got some money,
00:09:29.694 --> 00:09:36.360
so she went on vacation and
came with this money to São Paulo
00:09:36.830 --> 00:09:40.480
and she went to the Ipiranga Museum
saying that she was going to Piauí,
00:09:40.570 --> 00:09:42.873
asking if anyone wanted to go along.
00:09:42.873 --> 00:09:47.128
And...and… I accepted the
invitation so did Agda,
00:09:47.128 --> 00:09:50.298
besides she came no vehicle,
00:09:50.298 --> 00:09:52.341
just think how to carry all the material.
00:09:52.425 --> 00:09:56.554
I had a Rural Willis,
and then we went on it.
00:09:57.430 --> 00:10:01.225
That was it! Agda, she
and I left on such journey!
00:10:16.365 --> 00:10:20.828
In 1970, that was the
very first time that I got here.
00:10:21.579 --> 00:10:24.874
The road BR 020
was on the way here.
00:10:25.583 --> 00:10:29.795
And I reached there, at a
village named Várzea Grande.
00:10:29.795 --> 00:10:32.882
today, this place is known as Coronel José Dias
00:10:32.882 --> 00:10:36.761
and I arrived there and asked
00:10:36.761 --> 00:10:38.763
some people why… I said:
"Hey, I have been told that around
00:10:38.763 --> 00:10:41.932
here somewhere on the rocks there are drawings made by ‘native indians’.
00:10:57.323 --> 00:10:59.867
– Good morning, Sir, how are you doing?
00:10:59.867 --> 00:11:01.860
– Are you alright? Are you alright, ma'am?
00:11:01.860 --> 00:11:03.860
– How are you? How are you doing? Is everything fine?
00:11:03.860 --> 00:11:05.860
– Hi, how are you doing?
– Everything fine? – Everything fine.
00:11:05.860 --> 00:11:07.860
– How are you doing? – Everything fine?
00:11:07.860 --> 00:11:09.860
– Everything fine and you, ma'am?
00:11:09.860 --> 00:11:11.860
– Everything is Fine, isn't it?
00:11:21.500 --> 00:11:23.360
– We met at university in a Master Degree Program.
00:11:26.100 --> 00:11:27.360
– So, tell Dan about it.
00:11:31.030 --> 00:11:34.693
– It was very well,
everything was alright.
00:11:34.693 --> 00:11:38.280
– Damn hot and dusty.
00:11:38.280 --> 00:11:40.450
– Oh, Lord ./n A lot of hard work.
00:11:40.590 --> 00:11:43.450
– Going through dam path
is shorter than field path.
00:11:44.450 --> 00:11:46.247
– So, is there any water?
00:11:46.247 --> 00:11:49.625
– To have water,
only in the waterhole.
00:11:49.625 --> 00:11:50.376
– Oh, but, it's so far from here
00:11:50.376 --> 00:11:55.256
In 1973, Niède gets here
looking for these cave paintings.
00:11:55.256 --> 00:12:00.428
Then, she looked for Gaspar Ferreira, who was the mayor
00:12:00.428 --> 00:12:02.304
and the one who had taken her there and said
"Nilson is the one who can inform you about this"
00:12:02.346 --> 00:12:05.683
And then in the hotel already
she stopped right there,
00:12:05.683 --> 00:12:08.102
and soon after she showed
a picture of the mountain.
00:12:08.102 --> 00:12:10.646
The mountain was named
after her “Niède Guidon"
00:12:11.520 --> 00:12:13.950
– There is also the water problem?
– Yes, there is the water problem too.
00:12:14.000 --> 00:12:16.700
Ma'am, do you know this picture, this mountain here?
00:12:17.190 --> 00:12:19.100
I know it! I was grown by
the ravines of the mountainside.
00:12:19.290 --> 00:12:21.740
– The house… the house is still there by the ravines of the mountain.
00:12:22.310 --> 00:12:25.786
In the Capivara, in the Serra da Capivara.
Then she said "I want to go there!"
00:12:25.786 --> 00:12:29.582
So, she came to Adolfina, who welcomed her, assisted her...
00:12:29.790 --> 00:12:34.920
She said: "Mrs Adolfina, who could help me to
find someone to empty out this car?"
00:12:34.920 --> 00:12:39.300
I was standing a little far and she said
"There is this young man here ok…
00:12:39.300 --> 00:12:45.347
he came from São Paulo.
He is Strong and from the country,
00:12:45.347 --> 00:12:49.600
he might want to help.
He is handsome, isn't he?
00:12:50.000 --> 00:12:53.856
Then I approached and
then she invited me.
00:12:53.856 --> 00:12:57.651
She wanted to learn my name and
I gave it to her ‘João Batistinha’.
00:12:57.651 --> 00:13:01.155
And then she asked Mr.João, could you please do me the favor to empty out this car?"
00:13:01.155 --> 00:13:07.119
I said, only if it’s now. Mr João,
do you want to join us in the field work?".
00:13:07.119 --> 00:13:09.788
"To the forest?
I said I go.
00:13:09.788 --> 00:13:14.870
– We'll, let's go, people?
It's about time, bye!
00:13:18.670 --> 00:13:24.380
Are you coming on weekend. May God be
with you! Let's go into the wild land!
00:13:34.063 --> 00:13:40.180
We took the Rural, and went together
with Durval, that was tour guide,
00:13:40.350 --> 00:13:44.740
Mrs Adolfina’s husband that knew the zone
00:13:45.950 --> 00:13:51.956
and we started our track with Rural,
driving into Serra da Capivara “stones iself”
00:13:51.956 --> 00:13:57.086
that was only blocks of rock,
and it was not a road and…
00:13:57.086 --> 00:13:59.255
everything was like a lot of sand
00:13:59.255 --> 00:14:03.509
that we needed to start the
car so quickly and go almost flying
00:14:03.509 --> 00:14:06.820
There was one grotto after
the other with cave paintings,
00:14:06.900 --> 00:14:08.764
one grotto after the other.
00:14:08.764 --> 00:14:13.769
And then we stopped by
one called Toca do Paraguaio.
00:14:57.730 --> 00:14:59.106
We climbed up here
00:14:59.106 --> 00:15:03.777
and then we first saw this wonderful rock
00:15:03.777 --> 00:15:07.573
that is the conglomerate.
It's really beautiful.
00:15:07.573 --> 00:15:12.119
It has different lights that
are reflected in a different way.
00:15:12.119 --> 00:15:15.372
I felt that it was very, very,
very beautiful and above all
00:15:15.998 --> 00:15:18.542
all the cave paintings really
impressed me too much
00:15:18.542 --> 00:15:22.463
because I could see the
technical skills they had
00:15:22.463 --> 00:15:26.050
and everything they told, behind it
00:15:26.050 --> 00:15:31.096
there must have been a civilization. And
this one very well developed intellectually
00:15:31.096 --> 00:15:34.892
since they were able to speak to us clearly.
00:15:34.892 --> 00:15:39.605
Because what is important is that when
I studied archaeology, I studied
00:15:39.605 --> 00:15:44.610
archaelogy in Paris. And there, I got a
Specialization Degree in cave painting arts
00:15:44.610 --> 00:15:50.157
and what they taught us was that
cave painting artst in America was so primitive.
00:15:50.157 --> 00:15:56.372
There was no technology, there was
no perspective. It was like a child's drawing.
00:15:56.372 --> 00:15:59.333
When we arrived here and saw this, we just said:
00:15:59.333 --> 00:16:02.670
"Look, everything is wrong.
We must start all over again, right!?"
00:16:11.553 --> 00:16:14.348
Since the beginning when she arrived
00:16:14.348 --> 00:16:16.660
she only did everything in plastic canvas,
00:16:17.101 --> 00:16:19.700
she put the plastic canvas on the walls,
00:16:20.200 --> 00:16:26.819
I helped her with the sticks,
used to hold the canvas.
00:16:26.819 --> 00:16:29.780
They with brushes,
00:16:30.447 --> 00:16:35.452
painted on the top the drawing
under the canvas and then
00:16:35.536 --> 00:16:39.164
when they took off the plastic canvas,
the drawing was straight there perfect.
00:16:39.164 --> 00:16:43.210
When drawings were so
high we just held firmly
00:16:43.210 --> 00:16:45.170
it's here
00:16:49.550 --> 00:16:52.094
Then she climbed
00:16:52.094 --> 00:16:57.057
First, Niède climbed it and after,
Agda that was soft like a feather
00:16:57.057 --> 00:16:57.975
she was tiny lady,
00:16:57.975 --> 00:17:00.352
that just fit up there and
we were standing down here
00:17:00.352 --> 00:17:03.981
There were days that our arms
really hurt. It took so long...
00:17:04.356 --> 00:17:07.151
And when we arrived here,
we started to discover
00:17:07.151 --> 00:17:11.029
even perspective techniques
and we could demonstrate
00:17:11.029 --> 00:17:15.492
that they have the same techniques
shown in the paintings in Europe and Africa.
00:17:15.492 --> 00:17:21.498
So, these sites pictures, of these
first survey results that we did,
00:17:21.498 --> 00:17:25.377
I managed to engage help from France, to create the Permanent Mission of Piauí
00:18:10.047 --> 00:18:14.176
– If you want it for later, Bernadette has Just told me
that the cartography is just so crystal clear
00:18:15.177 --> 00:18:21.517
– We have to check it later. I think It would be good to summarize now what
00:18:23.727 --> 00:18:26.855
we’ll decide for this week. – She
prepared the Serra Branca’s cartography,
00:18:26.855 --> 00:18:28.857
and for the middle site zone,
00:18:28.857 --> 00:18:31.985
– We are going first to Serra Branca.
00:18:32.277 --> 00:18:35.447
– We are going to do the Toca
da Extrema, the excavations,
00:18:35.447 --> 00:18:38.367
you all know this is very complicated,
00:18:38.367 --> 00:18:43.580
in the Toca da Extrema.
– There are different traditions
00:18:43.580 --> 00:18:45.999
kept still and right there
and we will have to dig.
00:18:46.375 --> 00:18:50.379
– The survey done in
July turned into potter,
00:18:50.379 --> 00:18:52.381
plus the hunters in the lowest part,
00:18:52.381 --> 00:18:56.969
but the problem is that these sites are affected by floods.
00:18:57.135 --> 00:18:58.637
– This is a very peculiar problem.
00:19:15.904 --> 00:19:18.198
– The others go through the top way.
00:19:19.992 --> 00:19:22.244
– That's it?
– No, it's so much!
00:19:31.670 --> 00:19:33.714
– Come along, there are more coming.
00:19:33.714 --> 00:19:36.091
Sometimes, she was in the
front and we were behind her
00:19:36.091 --> 00:19:39.845
sometimes, we were in the
front and she was behind us
00:19:39.845 --> 00:19:44.016
she used to go on foot.
00:19:44.016 --> 00:19:47.519
She took lots of stuff, a huge portion and a canteen.
00:19:47.519 --> 00:19:49.521
Oh boy, you carrying only a bag and a canteen
00:19:50.188 --> 00:19:55.944
and we full of stuff, tools and
canned food, these sort of things.
00:19:55.944 --> 00:19:57.940
– Where are we going?
– I'm taking here.
00:19:58.739 --> 00:20:01.617
All along this region had no roads, there was nothing there.
00:20:01.617 --> 00:20:05.162
It was very complicated because we had to go ahead,
00:20:05.370 --> 00:20:07.956
and it was around 100 km that we walked
00:20:07.956 --> 00:20:10.876
and had to carry supplies
for the excavations,
00:20:10.876 --> 00:20:13.962
supplies for photography and everything
00:20:13.962 --> 00:20:18.175
such as food, water. Because
water was also rare to be found.
00:20:19.676 --> 00:20:26.725
There were three little round canteens.
To four, five people drink from them.
00:20:35.067 --> 00:20:39.446
– As soon as we arrive there Maria, we will heat some water to make coffee.
00:20:39.446 --> 00:20:41.949
– A bucket of coffee.
– Now, we are near.
00:20:46.286 --> 00:20:50.958
– We still have a kilometer. One and a
half kilometer. – Around one kilometer.
00:20:51.917 --> 00:20:55.837
– Hey, It's better we drink it later.
Have it left to drink later on,
00:20:56.421 --> 00:21:00.425
little cold water. Because this
one here… this is just so damn hot.
00:21:07.057 --> 00:21:10.894
– Aren't you hungry? It's delicious!
00:21:11.436 --> 00:21:13.522
– Caatinga’s typical food!
00:21:13.814 --> 00:21:17.109
– Rice, jeerked beef and casava flour.
00:21:19.778 --> 00:21:22.155
– Laura, let me serve you!
00:21:22.155 --> 00:21:24.157
– Just little meat!
00:21:24.157 --> 00:21:26.535
– Why without much meat?
00:21:26.535 --> 00:21:29.246
–I prefer armadillo!
– Do you?
00:21:29.288 --> 00:21:31.248
– This one is difficult. She
likes more the armadillo.
00:21:31.248 --> 00:21:33.250
– Thank you.
00:21:33.250 --> 00:21:35.961
– Do you want casava flour?
00:21:36.753 --> 00:21:41.591
– Right, you haven’t hunt an armadillo yet.
– Yeah. An armadillo is better, right!?
00:21:42.050 --> 00:21:44.136
When there was a little farm nearby,
00:21:44.136 --> 00:21:49.266
sometimes we stayed nearby
a little farm belonged to some people
00:21:49.266 --> 00:21:51.184
people who bred chickens and
we got eggs and these stuffs.
00:21:51.727 --> 00:21:54.855
But, at times we went on
five, six days with no food.
00:21:54.855 --> 00:21:57.941
We drank milk. Coffee.
00:21:57.941 --> 00:22:02.154
We ate candy. We ate those meats in cans.
00:22:02.154 --> 00:22:05.323
We natives only ate salty
food from the can of meat
00:22:05.323 --> 00:22:08.285
a lot of salt ‘cause we had nothing else,
00:22:08.285 --> 00:22:11.747
once nothing left to eat,
we were forced to buy food.
00:22:11.747 --> 00:22:15.250
One day the hunter, one day he
spent to hunt and we worked together
00:22:15.959 --> 00:22:21.423
twelve kilometers away and we had no water, we went to the source of water.
00:22:22.420 --> 00:22:25.100
But then no food left, and we had to keep on working anyway and
00:22:25.300 --> 00:22:27.846
it was three days that we had
absolutely nothing to eat. Nothing at all.
00:22:29.723 --> 00:22:34.269
Then she said: “Mister Nilson, go to the waterhole and take this money”,
00:22:34.269 --> 00:22:38.523
it will cost everything there but, we are not leaving. I’m already here. We aren’t leaving at all.
00:22:38.523 --> 00:22:46.360
the Hunter was not there.. But, I knew a
hiding place, like a bed, where a deer slept,
00:22:47.032 --> 00:22:47.440
it was there, in the bed it slept. And I killed it.
00:22:47.440 --> 00:22:47.440
I went there, it was there, in the bed it slept. And I killed it.
it was there, in the bed it slept. And I killed it.
00:22:47.440 --> 00:22:51.745
it was there, in the bed it slept. And I killed it.
00:22:53.288 --> 00:22:56.375
Then, we arrived back there, she didn’t think that I killed the deer.
00:22:56.375 --> 00:22:59.836
“Did you buy the deer?” No, I killed the deer. I killed it. The she goes, fine.
00:23:02.923 --> 00:23:08.470
Then, we finally had the deer to eat during our work, we just needed to finish work
00:23:09.971 --> 00:23:15.519
and go away. So, she told me just like this: “You shall never kill a deer again!”
00:23:46.466 --> 00:23:49.302
– So, boy. Any
hunter there today?
00:23:52.556 --> 00:23:55.016
– And did you find any
little deer to kill today?
00:23:55.016 --> 00:23:57.018
– No...
00:23:58.228 --> 00:24:03.233
– Was there any water in the waterhole
yesterday? – There is plenty over there.
00:24:03.233 --> 00:24:05.861
– Such a pity it’s so far
from here. – It’s far
00:24:06.611 --> 00:24:10.615
– Is more than one mile away from here,
isn’t it? – It’s over it. It’s pretty far.
00:24:11.867 --> 00:24:15.328
– It should be around 7 kilometres
00:24:15.829 --> 00:24:21.042
– Girls, if you want to go tonight,
when you finish to get changed
00:24:22.919 --> 00:24:24.588
you can…
00:24:24.588 --> 00:24:28.008
– When the excavation is
over, you can get changed.
00:24:35.432 --> 00:24:41.229
– By the Sun… does anybody feel... cold…
did anybody feel cold? – What cold?
00:24:42.355 --> 00:24:47.027
– Now, I will sing the cowboy’s farewell when
he had a goodbye from his employer.
00:24:47.027 --> 00:24:50.697
– So, while he was taking a little
bell with a harsh pain in his heart
00:24:50.697 --> 00:24:54.201
– He came from Piauí to live in the South
of Brazil and once there he intended to
00:24:54.201 --> 00:24:57.162
never be back and in the South
of the country no cattle even catched
00:24:57.162 --> 00:24:58.788
– So, sing it
00:24:58.788 --> 00:25:03.335
– Oh master, I ask by the
holy voice that I exclaim
00:25:03.335 --> 00:25:09.257
– Take care of all your cattle,
I’ll leave not to see
00:25:09.341 --> 00:25:13.595
– I’ll leave not see your
cattles starve to death
00:25:14.304 --> 00:25:19.643
– But, to the cow go all the
curses, if you find a tired cow,
00:25:19.643 --> 00:25:24.648
also gaze the flag, from
the top of the Chapada
00:25:24.731 --> 00:25:31.279
– Like someone who misses
the time of the “Cows Festival”
00:25:33.240 --> 00:25:39.496
– My horse Xexéu is also too skinny.
00:25:39.496 --> 00:25:44.501
– I’ll make a portrait of
him, to put on my hat
00:25:44.501 --> 00:25:50.799
– Like a real badge of the Heaven’s Vaquejada.
00:25:52.467 --> 00:25:58.056
– I’ll leave to Brasília, Mato Grosso e Paraná
00:25:58.431 --> 00:26:02.644
São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro,
I’ll try to settle there.
00:26:03.311 --> 00:26:09.109
– When winter arrives,
I’ll still come back.
00:26:10.360 --> 00:26:16.533
– If in the South of Brazil,
your cowboy doesn’t die.
00:26:16.908 --> 00:26:21.413
– When winter is over,
the Northeast is so dry.
00:26:33.258 --> 00:26:38.013
Once we arrived we just looked around,
we took measures from here to there
00:26:38.805 --> 00:26:42.350
the height and length.
00:26:42.851 --> 00:26:45.729
Then, she asked us to start digging.
00:26:45.937 --> 00:26:49.774
– Let’s enclose the excavation
starting from these pickets
00:26:49.774 --> 00:26:53.153
we start by the side of the previous
surveys, that I’ve done in June,
00:26:53.153 --> 00:26:56.197
on what we’ve found pottery in
00:26:56.197 --> 00:26:57.407
10 centimetres,
00:26:58.450 --> 00:27:01.202
and with one meter, we
already have hunters and tools.
00:27:01.745 --> 00:27:06.041
Let’s make a reduced bottom
since there is no water in the zone.
00:27:06.624 --> 00:27:10.837
– They have told that there was water, but, the drought was horrible this year
00:27:10.837 --> 00:27:12.422
and we have no water.
00:27:12.422 --> 00:27:14.758
– Because of this, let’s reduce
the digging to 3 meters of bottom,
00:27:14.758 --> 00:27:17.719
however, we’ll go the bottom
because of the engravings.
00:27:17.719 --> 00:27:20.221
– You’ve seen that the blocks are engraved.
00:27:20.221 --> 00:27:24.184
– So, we have rockpaintings on
the walls from the bottom to top,
00:27:24.184 --> 00:27:27.812
plus the engraved blocks.
This shelter is very important
00:27:27.812 --> 00:27:30.732
because there are several
tyles overlapping these paintings.
00:27:30.899 --> 00:27:36.029
– You’ve already found pottery pieces.
– No. It needs more depth.
00:27:36.404 --> 00:27:39.949
– Here we still are in the
middle of the current period.
00:27:42.410 --> 00:27:43.995
– On the next way down, we’ll do...
00:27:44.621 --> 00:27:46.664
– However, have you
seen it in the surface?
00:27:46.664 --> 00:27:52.045
– No, never on the surface.
Only with a survey of 10cm
00:27:52.045 --> 00:27:53.546
– Soon, we'll need…
00:27:53.546 --> 00:27:56.466
we are going to do the next
experiment here with a brush
00:27:57.258 --> 00:27:59.636
– There is nothing here.
00:27:59.636 --> 00:28:05.058
– Absolutely nothing besides
all the dirt from nowadays.
00:28:05.433 --> 00:28:07.394
– Hunters come around here so often.
00:28:10.647 --> 00:28:13.900
When we dig, to take the sediment away,
00:28:13.900 --> 00:28:18.530
we clean everything, we
always had the men working.
00:28:18.530 --> 00:28:24.119
And then I said to the men: "Look, now I came to a rock here that is not letting me get down there
00:28:24.119 --> 00:28:29.165
you have to take this rock" Then they said: "Oh no,we must make the hole bigger
00:28:29.165 --> 00:28:34.671
because only one man fits there, and the rock is so heavy and two people are needed.
00:28:34.671 --> 00:28:38.425
And then I said: “I do not want to make it bigger”. So I go tinto the rock myself
00:28:38.425 --> 00:28:41.469
I got a very heavy stone and
gave it out to the two men.
00:28:41.469 --> 00:28:45.181
I alone giving and two men taking
00:28:45.181 --> 00:28:49.352
So a new joke saying that
I was stronger than men was told.
00:28:49.352 --> 00:28:53.940
She is going to show staff that now
she will be around working all the time
00:28:53.940 --> 00:28:57.902
from breaking stones,
carry a stone, lift a stone, even buckets,
00:28:57.902 --> 00:29:02.824
a very detailed work, a fine job
such as getting a skeleton carefully
00:29:02.824 --> 00:29:07.787
with a paintbrush and so forth. As her capacity of work and resistence were really impressive,
00:29:07.787 --> 00:29:10.623
so she was always the one to pay the example.
00:29:10.748 --> 00:29:19.132
– Let’s continue the excavation
here, right on this clean part, innerside,
00:29:19.132 --> 00:29:22.385
here you are the blocks containing “cupules”on the rocks,
00:29:22.385 --> 00:29:25.722
in which is overlappeb
by this block with engraving
00:29:25.722 --> 00:29:27.724
that refers to TRIVIGIDES,
the TRIFIDES.
00:29:27.724 --> 00:29:31.728
– I will try to get the rock
with cupules entirely,
00:29:31.728 --> 00:29:33.062
to try to reach the bottom.
00:29:33.104 --> 00:29:36.441
– Shall I say the colour code,
Niède? – Yes, you may
00:29:36.483 --> 00:29:46.576
– 6, 2, 10, Y, R
– Thank you
00:29:48.620 --> 00:29:52.081
I brought a interdisciplinary team,
00:29:52.165 --> 00:29:56.753
because an archaeologist needs information about the environment,
00:29:56.753 --> 00:29:59.172
how that evolved and everything else. And when I arrived here
00:29:59.172 --> 00:30:04.719
there was nothing, because there has never been any kind of research here in the region.
00:30:04.719 --> 00:30:09.807
So, in 1973, I stayed here for three months
00:30:09.807 --> 00:30:15.104
and brought a team that consisted on
geologists, bothanicals, zoologists, antropologists,
00:30:15.104 --> 00:30:18.775
what I mean is, then a full
research about the zone was done,
00:30:18.775 --> 00:30:24.364
about the enviroment, the current culture and all unique aspects of the region.
00:30:33.665 --> 00:30:36.459
Agda was very Young,
00:30:36.459 --> 00:30:40.171
she left.
00:30:41.005 --> 00:30:45.218
She rode on a donkey and when
she reached the edge of the mountain,
00:30:45.218 --> 00:30:48.429
she was standing and taking a
look and she heard a child criying.
00:30:48.429 --> 00:30:52.976
She said: “Sir, a child has just cried here!”
00:30:57.105 --> 00:30:59.399
We found a fossil of a child.
00:30:59.857 --> 00:31:05.613
I went there and pat on the head, put my hands up...
00:31:05.822 --> 00:31:09.576
Then we dig
and there was the child.
00:31:09.576 --> 00:31:15.582
Very little head, it was inside a
“cabaça” a kind of bowl called porunga.
00:31:15.582 --> 00:31:20.336
The whole body in the bowl,
those little hands and head in the bowl.
00:31:20.461 --> 00:31:23.339
Is was burried right there
in a caroá little hamock.
00:31:23.339 --> 00:31:26.426
There was still a piece of
the hamock fabric left.
00:31:54.746 --> 00:31:58.791
We stayed there for
about 15 days, 20 days.
00:32:00.126 --> 00:32:02.920
And to take all the stuff out of there,
00:32:02.920 --> 00:32:08.176
we tied a fabrica round our necks,
00:32:08.176 --> 00:32:11.387
around our waists and had
everything there on the fabric.
00:32:11.387 --> 00:32:15.224
The pots, the head of
the native indians, right?
00:32:16.351 --> 00:32:20.146
I got everything up front
and leave, to the path,
00:32:20.146 --> 00:32:27.070
Niède came with the stuff, a little bit
of this, and the pot to the pension.
00:32:27.070 --> 00:32:29.530
She was very happy when
some people came to see it,
00:32:29.530 --> 00:32:32.325
people who came from
Petrolina that stayed in town,
00:32:32.617 --> 00:32:35.161
that stayed there only to
take a look at the corpses.
00:32:35.161 --> 00:32:37.163
She showed everything. She brought it
from her room to show only the heads,
00:32:37.163 --> 00:32:40.041
there was no need to show the body, the heads
that she put around there well sustained.
00:32:40.041 --> 00:32:43.503
Big teeth! From the natives,
00:32:43.503 --> 00:32:45.922
there was no broken or drilled tooth.
00:32:46.005 --> 00:32:48.299
Those big eyes. Big holes.
00:32:48.466 --> 00:32:51.469
A man invaded the room,
00:32:51.469 --> 00:32:54.514
then Doctor Niède: No my
friend, stay where you are.
00:32:54.514 --> 00:32:58.518
Do not come in. Then it had
to come in one at a time,
00:32:58.518 --> 00:33:02.772
a big queue was made.
00:33:04.565 --> 00:33:10.196
Pots, indians, heads,
many of them with teeth.
00:33:10.655 --> 00:33:14.617
The boy in the bowl,
did you understand?
00:33:15.076 --> 00:33:19.038
Then people wanted to
look and touch indian skulls.
00:33:29.757 --> 00:33:34.262
An then, I told her about
this vanishing place that was
00:33:34.262 --> 00:33:36.639
in the Gargalo do Sansão,
00:33:39.392 --> 00:33:43.354
that people used to say that
nobody never went down there.
00:33:43.354 --> 00:33:48.025
Then, she told us to go there.
00:33:49.944 --> 00:33:53.614
I went up there and I saw…
00:33:53.614 --> 00:33:56.951
there was a hole of more or
less one meter of diameter.
00:33:57.535 --> 00:34:01.664
You looked inside, put the flashlight
overthere and couldn’t see the hole end.
00:34:01.664 --> 00:34:04.959
Since I am very curious,
I decided to go down.
00:34:05.793 --> 00:34:08.337
And I was going down, going down,
00:34:08.337 --> 00:34:13.217
I went down around 120 meters
that I tied the rope on my back,
00:34:13.217 --> 00:34:16.721
up there, and I kept going to the bottom until
I reached it and I saw there was a cave.
00:34:17.638 --> 00:34:21.476
And on the cave floor,
the first thing I saw
00:34:21.476 --> 00:34:25.521
was a complete skeleton
of a saber-toothed tiger.
00:34:25.938 --> 00:34:30.067
And that you could see
that it got inside there,
00:34:30.067 --> 00:34:33.571
lied down and died inside there. It stayed the way it was,
00:34:33.571 --> 00:34:36.115
lying down by side with its
fangs and everyhting else.
00:34:36.115 --> 00:34:39.160
And then, I started
to walk around
00:34:39.327 --> 00:34:43.164
there and I saw accesses
to other deeper caves
00:34:43.164 --> 00:34:46.709
and also a skeleton
from the megafauna.
00:34:46.709 --> 00:34:50.087
What to say...something
absolutely stunning. Paintings
00:34:50.087 --> 00:34:51.214
and,
00:34:51.214 --> 00:34:53.925
by the moment there
I was going back up,
00:34:53.925 --> 00:34:58.763
there were a feel hives that
were disturbed by my passage.
00:34:58.763 --> 00:35:01.891
And they took revenge on me,
they threw themselves on me.
00:35:01.891 --> 00:35:05.144
And then, when I was going
up with them stinging me.
00:35:05.144 --> 00:35:13.986
Then, there were bees on everybody, on the
whole world, trying to explore outside.
00:35:13.986 --> 00:35:19.325
And only she stayed inside. And everybody: someone needs to get
00:35:19.325 --> 00:35:19.325
Niède, someone needs to take her! Someone went down to get her.
00:35:19.325 --> 00:35:27.083
Everything was messy and we
pulled her. We pulled her anyway.
00:35:27.083 --> 00:35:31.546
When I arrived outside, then everyone
I was standing there waiting for me,
00:35:31.546 --> 00:35:34.215
they all helped me to
scare the bees away.
00:35:34.340 --> 00:35:37.134
And I climbed down running and then,
00:35:37.134 --> 00:35:44.100
And I climbed down running and then,
dragged the car to the right direction
00:35:44.100 --> 00:35:47.103
and waited for Niède’s arrival,
because they came carrying her.
00:35:47.103 --> 00:35:49.564
And, Doctor Isaías
told me like this,
00:35:49.564 --> 00:35:54.068
if Niède P.D. survives until this night,
and she’ll have no problems further.
00:35:55.111 --> 00:35:58.489
Then there she was, at five o’clock
in the morning, she woke up and said
00:35:58.489 --> 00:36:01.868
“Sílvia, are you ready?
Let’s see how is everything in Sansão?”
00:36:01.868 --> 00:36:06.831
"What!?" I told her, Niède,
"I couldn’t sleep for a minute this night."
00:36:07.957 --> 00:36:13.921
"What do you mean,
you couldn’t sleep for a minute?"
00:36:13.921 --> 00:36:15.920
"Niède! Did you know
that you almost died!?"
00:36:22.305 --> 00:36:25.308
We went up on foot here,
00:36:25.308 --> 00:36:29.061
we walked on foot around there, and we went up there.
00:36:29.687 --> 00:36:33.065
We went down there in the "Pedra Furada".
00:36:33.566 --> 00:36:37.528
and I showed it to her and she was…
00:36:38.571 --> 00:36:43.659
there are a lot of sites
in the "Pedra Furada".
00:36:43.951 --> 00:36:49.081
I arrived there, saw a huge rock, a huge rock. A beautiful and huge rock, a huge "Pedra Furada".
00:36:49.081 --> 00:36:51.334
Then, I came back, feeling happy.
00:36:51.667 --> 00:36:54.962
When I came back, they three were working, only three of them and then I said
00:36:55.671 --> 00:36:58.883
"Miss (PhD), congratulations to you!"
00:36:58.966 --> 00:37:00.301
"What's going on?"
and I said:
00:37:00.301 --> 00:37:03.596
"There is a rock there that is
such a wonder, it's so beautiful!"
00:37:04.013 --> 00:37:06.140
She wondered, serious, and
we went there to look at it.
00:39:02.465 --> 00:39:04.842
– Everything is fine,
00:39:04.842 --> 00:39:08.179
I managed to find this home piece
00:39:08.179 --> 00:39:12.099
I found one wonderful
here but I need to dig more.
00:39:14.435 --> 00:39:16.937
– It continues all the way here, look.
00:39:19.815 --> 00:39:22.401
– Where could I help you?
00:39:22.401 --> 00:39:24.403
– Are you finishing the cleaning here?
– Yes, I am
00:39:24.403 --> 00:39:27.573
– I think that...
There is a horn here
00:39:28.074 --> 00:39:31.160
– Yes, it’s a little high here.
– Look here, I found one more
00:39:31.160 --> 00:39:33.829
– There is a beautiful piece...
– Another one here too…
00:39:33.829 --> 00:39:36.791
– It should be taken away from here…
00:39:36.791 --> 00:39:40.544
– It needs to come to
this way here. There is wood.
00:39:40.544 --> 00:39:44.840
– That’s good, it would be the first
time we find the wood industry,
00:39:44.840 --> 00:39:48.469
but, as far as we can see,
it doesn’t seem scratched.
00:39:48.469 --> 00:39:51.180
– However, anyway, it has charcoal and leaves.
00:39:51.597 --> 00:39:54.683
I worked with the excavations
00:39:55.017 --> 00:39:59.063
like I learned in France,
I was LeGorier Gounot’s student
00:39:59.063 --> 00:40:01.440
and then we worked with it.
00:40:01.982 --> 00:40:08.948
For example, the Americans... they make layers measuring 15 centimetres,
00:40:08.948 --> 00:40:13.869
you excavate 15 centimetres and then… in France, no. You excavate the natural layers,
00:40:13.869 --> 00:40:18.207
what means that you need to understand
the soil patterns, to follow the soil trace,
00:40:18.207 --> 00:40:18.207
follow all its movements, the comings and goings,
do you understand?
00:40:18.207 --> 00:40:25.381
And, then, you try to rebuild all the evolution from this sedimentation.
00:40:25.548 --> 00:40:28.217
The archaeological site is like a cake.
00:40:28.217 --> 00:40:31.554
You have a layer made of heavy cream,
00:40:31.595 --> 00:40:34.473
a layer made of
chocolate, a layer of biscuit,
00:40:34.473 --> 00:40:39.812
a heavy layer again. It’s very simple. Nothing complicated.
00:40:40.604 --> 00:40:43.607
We could date each one of the layers.
00:40:45.442 --> 00:40:49.321
You have to pay a lot of attention to what you are doing, you have to observe all the time,
00:40:49.321 --> 00:40:52.199
especially the tiniest
details, in a very slow pace.
00:40:53.033 --> 00:40:57.538
And each object you find, any
sample of the human presence
00:40:57.538 --> 00:41:01.417
has to be left somewhere
to be positioned and then
00:41:01.417 --> 00:41:06.088
all of this needs to be done and
each piece, each material collected
00:41:06.088 --> 00:41:10.384
has to receive its own number to be related to the place it is
00:41:10.384 --> 00:41:16.849
and this is what I really found very interesting. You must pay a lot of attention to the minimum details
00:41:16.849 --> 00:41:22.104
and this is what keeps the possibility of rebuilding the past events that took place there.
00:41:22.480 --> 00:41:27.359
You, excavating, you are
thinking about what you are doing
00:41:27.401 --> 00:41:31.071
and what can show up.
And if something different appears,
00:41:31.155 --> 00:41:35.326
you may ask: why, when and how? This is what really matters!
00:41:35.451 --> 00:41:40.164
Finding a bonfire with its charcoal pieces,
you know that with these charcoals,
00:41:40.164 --> 00:41:44.460
You’ll be able to date a layer, or find a block piece from a painted wall,
00:41:44.460 --> 00:41:47.713
fallen in a level that is already
dated of nine thousand years.
00:41:47.713 --> 00:41:52.635
Finding these things in a context and
being able to handle with this context.
00:41:52.635 --> 00:41:57.139
Be able to relate what you are finding to something else. It’s no advance piece
00:41:57.139 --> 00:42:02.645
having only one beautiful if it’s out of a context. It needs to be in a context to tell its story.
00:42:04.730 --> 00:42:12.363
Archaeology is like a puzzle, which
we have only the half of the pieces.
00:42:13.781 --> 00:42:18.035
We wish we had the full
picture represented by the puzzle
00:42:18.035 --> 00:42:20.120
however, we don’t have all the pieces.
00:42:20.120 --> 00:42:25.125
So how they lived, which were
their territories, how they hunted,
00:42:26.418 --> 00:42:29.171
where they settled,
where they got water
00:42:29.171 --> 00:42:34.677
These questions obviously matter, but, they are very hard
00:42:34.677 --> 00:42:38.472
to be approached, because
a lot of data is recquired
00:42:38.472 --> 00:42:43.519
and as much as we recoil
on time, less data we have.
00:42:44.979 --> 00:42:48.440
The archaeologist’s job is fairly to look for
00:42:48.440 --> 00:42:52.611
how to discover what happened in the past.
00:42:52.611 --> 00:42:56.240
You spent the present, looking for the past.
00:42:59.868 --> 00:43:05.624
When we were kind of
in forty centimetres of depth,
00:43:05.624 --> 00:43:08.919
because all the pieces of
charcoal I took to France
00:43:08.919 --> 00:43:13.465
to be dated there, because here
in Brazil there was no lab, nothing.
00:43:13.465 --> 00:43:16.093
So, came the dating result
00:43:16.093 --> 00:43:18.554
it showed 28 thousand years.
00:43:18.554 --> 00:43:21.265
I went to the lab and told the lab director:
00:43:21.265 --> 00:43:25.269
"you must have mixed the samples."
00:43:25.269 --> 00:43:28.147
Because in America, it can’t
be from 28 thousand years ago.
00:43:28.147 --> 00:43:30.274
She said: "it’s your sample."
00:43:30.274 --> 00:43:34.445
"Keep digging there because there
must be something new around.
00:44:06.894 --> 00:44:10.189
So, we kept working in the "Pedra Furada"
00:44:10.189 --> 00:44:14.735
because we already had the
dating for 50 centimeters depth.
00:44:15.486 --> 00:44:19.073
So we went to the rocky
basis, it took us 10 years.
00:44:19.615 --> 00:44:24.286
At the beginning of the upper layers
there were remains of a piece of pottery,
00:44:24.286 --> 00:44:27.331
chipped stones
00:44:27.331 --> 00:44:29.333
and above all bonfires,
00:44:29.333 --> 00:44:33.837
they placed large blocks
and made fire inside.
00:44:34.630 --> 00:44:38.884
And that was continuing down
and then the pottery disappears.
00:44:38.884 --> 00:44:43.263
The pottery appeared here in the region some 13,000 years ago
00:44:43.263 --> 00:44:48.268
and from here down there was
only high quality lithic material
00:44:48.268 --> 00:44:52.231
and we found even
bonfires in the base rock,
00:44:52.231 --> 00:45:00.572
bonfires that allowed the dating because Carbon 14 does not date beyond about 60 thousand years
00:45:00.572 --> 00:45:04.243
But, there are modern technologies today,
00:45:04.243 --> 00:45:08.914
such as thermoluminescence
that allows us to date
00:45:08.914 --> 00:45:13.502
the blocks of rock that were
thus heated and that is how we got
00:45:13.502 --> 00:45:18.882
the dates of those bonfires that were
on the base of the rock of the "Pedra Furada".
00:45:45.576 --> 00:45:50.956
And that's how we arrived about 100 thousand years ago from the "Pedra Furada".
00:45:50.956 --> 00:45:56.670
and we saw all this cave
art that we documented
00:45:56.670 --> 00:46:00.215
and it has perspective,
it has a technology
00:46:00.215 --> 00:46:01.884
and then tells
00:46:02.217 --> 00:46:06.305
fantastic stories that are very different, right.
00:46:29.661 --> 00:46:33.499
You would say that you
are in a museum of modern art.
00:46:33.499 --> 00:46:36.877
Absolutely! No artist has created anything
00:46:36.877 --> 00:46:40.547
prehistoric man ever did
these same things, that is,
00:46:40.547 --> 00:46:45.177
he has a wealth of
imagination absolutely fantastic.
00:46:45.177 --> 00:46:48.805
The human
representations, the animals,
00:46:49.806 --> 00:46:52.601
unique! There is no such thing in the world!
00:46:52.893 --> 00:46:57.814
These figures are then
always representing scenes.
00:46:57.814 --> 00:47:03.111
Scenes that are linked to the
cultural traditions of these peoples,
00:47:03.111 --> 00:47:07.199
but we do not have the code to decipher.
00:47:11.495 --> 00:47:14.289
As we do not have ethnic descendants,
00:47:14.289 --> 00:47:19.086
groups ethnic descendants who made these paintings,
00:47:19.086 --> 00:47:21.088
as in some places in the world
you have the ethnic desecendents
00:47:21.088 --> 00:47:25.968
so you can not tell the meaning andno one can tell you what the meaning is.
00:47:25.968 --> 00:47:31.098
So you can not work with meaning. It is possible
to work with a sign that is the painting itself
00:47:31.098 --> 00:47:35.060
and here we work the technique, thematic and set design.
00:47:35.060 --> 00:47:38.438
Now there are some
that are evidently
00:47:38.438 --> 00:47:43.277
that they are hunting because they
have animals, they are with bow and arrow.
00:47:43.610 --> 00:47:48.699
Human figures in ritual scenes, in scenes of hunting in sexual scenes,
00:47:48.699 --> 00:47:53.245
scenes of childbirth. There's...
everything is represented there!
00:47:53.245 --> 00:47:56.957
They have, their history there.
00:48:04.298 --> 00:48:08.260
Within his imagery he has
the ability on his mental screen
00:48:08.260 --> 00:48:13.056
to retrieve these images and project, and he is building the memory.
00:48:13.056 --> 00:48:18.687
So the cave paintings are the beginning
of the formation of a creative memory.
00:48:31.283 --> 00:48:35.704
That's why people paint here, or here,
00:48:35.704 --> 00:48:40.667
or here, respect where
others painted it can be said
00:48:40.667 --> 00:48:45.047
that the place has symbolic importance.
00:48:45.047 --> 00:48:48.342
The place has a signification,
00:48:48.342 --> 00:48:54.348
the painting adds to the place a meaning.
00:49:06.568 --> 00:49:11.156
Once we held a meeting
here with indigenous peoples,
00:49:11.156 --> 00:49:17.496
various tribes came and the Indians who went to see those paintings on the "Pedra Furada",
00:49:17.496 --> 00:49:21.750
when they saw the scenes of a
series of human figures, side by side,
00:49:21.750 --> 00:49:24.378
they stood one behind the other
00:49:24.378 --> 00:49:27.339
and doing so with arms,
dancing and singing.
00:49:27.339 --> 00:49:30.676
So for the Indians the
scenes have a meaning.
00:49:52.698 --> 00:49:55.909
It is not by me that I compare
the other, it is what makes the other
00:49:55.909 --> 00:49:59.037
that allows me
to know who I am.
00:49:59.037 --> 00:50:03.291
And then, I do not identify
with the man of prehistory
00:50:03.291 --> 00:50:07.129
It is the man of prehistory
who gives me my identity.
00:50:09.464 --> 00:50:15.846
We can not interpret the figures
in a scientifically correct way.
00:50:16.430 --> 00:50:22.769
Unless we can communicate
with the spirit of prehistoric man.
00:51:19.284 --> 00:51:23.455
When we saw the importance of this in reality
00:51:23.455 --> 00:51:26.458
what we asked was the
protection of all these sites
00:51:26.458 --> 00:51:30.045
and the government thought the
solution was to make a national park.
00:51:31.087 --> 00:51:35.342
We made this road to work on this site.
00:51:35.383 --> 00:51:39.304
We made that road in the beginning
of 1973, it was improved this year.
00:51:39.846 --> 00:51:43.308
When was the National Park created?
00:51:43.308 --> 00:51:47.354
The National Park was enacted in 1979.
00:51:48.522 --> 00:51:52.609
But it is still the case
today that we are ending
00:51:52.609 --> 00:51:57.280
the expropriation
waiver and hopefully
00:51:57.280 --> 00:52:01.785
it will be possible to close
00:52:01.785 --> 00:52:04.955
the park now in 1990.
00:52:06.915 --> 00:52:11.127
It was then that we created the
Foundation to be able to have a legal entity,
00:52:11.127 --> 00:52:13.129
to be able to fight for the park
00:52:13.129 --> 00:52:16.591
and we also decided
00:52:16.591 --> 00:52:18.593
to start the guaritas [booths]
00:52:18.593 --> 00:52:20.595
we obtained the support of
the Intero American Bank
00:52:20.595 --> 00:52:24.307
that financed the construction of
the first guaritas [guard booths]
00:52:24.307 --> 00:52:27.853
and from then we began to put employees and we began then
00:52:27.853 --> 00:52:30.480
to defend the park.
00:53:51.144 --> 00:53:58.568
– They look like street children... as if they were images of Africa.
00:54:05.533 --> 00:54:07.994
– Close your legs!
00:54:11.623 --> 00:54:16.378
The old Zabelê was good,
00:54:17.253 --> 00:54:22.592
there were about six
hundred people who lived there.
00:54:23.259 --> 00:54:26.179
623 people.
00:54:26.179 --> 00:54:28.181
It was a settlement.
00:54:28.181 --> 00:54:30.183
There was a church,
00:54:30.183 --> 00:54:33.520
a school, understood!?
00:54:33.520 --> 00:54:35.522
It had a lot.
00:54:35.522 --> 00:54:37.190
There were lots of people.
00:54:37.190 --> 00:54:42.028
They were relatives mostly.
Cousins, aunt, nephew, all.
00:54:43.071 --> 00:54:47.450
They were relatives. I think I am a son
of three Brothers. The families there.
00:54:47.784 --> 00:54:51.663
The Indians lived here. In the
"Pedra Furada", in the new mountain range
00:54:51.663 --> 00:54:53.665
here, in the Piauí River.
00:54:53.665 --> 00:54:58.169
From there they had a confrontation,
they had one with the first people that arrived
00:54:58.169 --> 00:55:00.171
that were called Virturim.
00:55:00.171 --> 00:55:03.466
It means that they stayed with
00:55:03.466 --> 00:55:05.468
some children who were left behind
00:55:05.468 --> 00:55:07.262
and these children raised and now
00:55:07.262 --> 00:55:09.264
we are descendants of these Indians.
00:55:09.556 --> 00:55:13.518
In 1886,
00:55:13.518 --> 00:55:15.979
the Zabelê was inhabited.
00:55:16.771 --> 00:55:20.025
In 1886,
00:55:20.025 --> 00:55:23.695
from the time of the slaves,
00:55:23.695 --> 00:55:27.157
the slaves were set free.
00:55:29.492 --> 00:55:32.037
– When I was born my
grandparents lived here,
00:55:32.037 --> 00:55:35.040
they worked with rubber.
They planted cassava.
00:55:35.040 --> 00:55:39.377
– I was born here, when I was born here at age 2, at age 2.
00:55:39.377 --> 00:55:43.131
This is my grandpa, all of this belonged to my grandpa. All full of Count's Fruit .
00:55:43.548 --> 00:55:48.553
And there was everything here, there
were cashew trees, it was all my grandfather's.
00:55:49.721 --> 00:55:51.723
It was very good here, and they had to work
00:55:51.723 --> 00:55:55.852
work with the leaves of the cassava. The manioc was very good.
00:56:29.427 --> 00:56:33.348
Then she launched the National Park,
00:56:33.348 --> 00:56:37.769
there she said that nobody could be inside the park.
00:56:37.769 --> 00:56:41.022
Then it was to indemnify the people,
00:56:41.523 --> 00:56:42.899
paying them everything
00:56:42.899 --> 00:56:45.151
for getting out of the place.
00:56:45.151 --> 00:56:49.114
Then they could look for other houses,
another place where they wanted.
00:56:49.572 --> 00:56:52.325
It was forbidden by law
00:56:52.325 --> 00:56:55.745
and inside the park no one could stay.
00:56:56.121 --> 00:57:01.292
And then, some residents agreed and others did not agree.
00:57:01.543 --> 00:57:07.924
By law, the government is obliged to indemnify the people
00:57:07.924 --> 00:57:12.428
but when it was time to indemnify,
anyone had the title of the property,
00:57:12.428 --> 00:57:14.931
Because they had
arrived, killed the Indians,
00:57:14.931 --> 00:57:17.684
settled there and never
registered their lands,
00:57:17.684 --> 00:57:21.229
because if they registered, they would have to pay tax.
00:57:21.229 --> 00:57:27.026
That was the great tragedy, because
legally they could not be compensated.
00:57:27.277 --> 00:57:30.572
It was not Niède who
took people out of the park,
00:57:30.572 --> 00:57:33.241
which is still being talked about.
00:57:33.241 --> 00:57:36.286
It was not her that was taking people,
00:57:36.286 --> 00:57:39.914
that was to create the park,
which was following legislation.
00:57:39.914 --> 00:57:42.417
And the government failed!
00:57:42.458 --> 00:57:46.212
Because they took those
people out and gave up!
00:57:46.212 --> 00:57:50.133
There was no social assistance or anyone to indicate anything.
00:57:50.175 --> 00:57:52.719
And then, for a long time it was Niède's fault.
00:57:52.927 --> 00:57:56.764
They were compensated
but only after some
00:57:56.806 --> 00:58:02.896
4 or 5 years of legal problems,
for then be able to solve this situation.
00:58:03.313 --> 00:58:05.648
Then I came to the city,
00:58:05.648 --> 00:58:07.650
some bought a house to live.
00:58:07.650 --> 00:58:09.652
Some did not buy anything,
they went to São Paulo,
00:58:09.652 --> 00:58:12.697
went to Brasilia, went to Paraná, others to Maranhão,
00:58:12.697 --> 00:58:16.451
others to Pará and spaced out everyone
00:58:16.451 --> 00:58:18.786
and today there are few people living here.
00:58:27.420 --> 00:58:30.006
The local culture was a unique
00:58:30.006 --> 00:58:34.719
and an exclusive culture,
trying to survive in the region
00:58:35.511 --> 00:58:40.225
At that time, it rained a lot, but
the people did not plant anything
00:58:41.309 --> 00:58:43.353
and meat was a rare thing.
00:58:46.022 --> 00:58:48.691
I left the little breeding aside
00:58:48.691 --> 00:58:50.818
aside for they not play in the sty
00:58:50.818 --> 00:58:53.238
and I went into the woods to hunt.
00:58:53.279 --> 00:58:56.032
I got armadillo that I could
eat for the whole week.
00:58:56.032 --> 00:58:58.952
I didn’t need to kill the goat and still we had meat to eat.
00:58:58.952 --> 00:59:02.205
People lived entirely
from hunting armadillos,
00:59:02.205 --> 00:59:07.293
it was the largest trade, armadillo’s.
00:59:08.002 --> 00:59:11.047
It means that there was a free market,
00:59:11.047 --> 00:59:15.468
even buyers from
Salvador bought 600 up to 800
00:59:15.468 --> 00:59:17.845
armadillos to take back.
00:59:17.845 --> 00:59:20.139
A real business, very big indeed.
00:59:24.185 --> 00:59:29.023
There was no butcher here, there
was nothing, so they had to hunt, right.
00:59:29.440 --> 00:59:34.195
Then after that, when
the park was created,
00:59:34.195 --> 00:59:38.157
we started with the
question of protection:
00:59:38.157 --> 00:59:40.868
we needed to explain them that inside
the park they could not hunt anymore.
01:00:25.788 --> 01:00:29.000
– Good morning! How are you, sir?
– How are you?
01:00:29.000 --> 01:00:32.003
– So so… How about you, Doctor?
01:00:32.003 --> 01:00:37.383
– How are you Doctor,
everything alright!? Man!
01:00:37.383 --> 01:00:40.303
– You look young...
– Young! Where??
01:00:49.145 --> 01:00:53.524
– By the time to go up, we threw the rope so women could come up. It was such a struggle...
01:00:53.524 --> 01:00:59.989
– And then brought the ladder, amended other ladder. It was such a struggle...
01:00:59.989 --> 01:01:04.619
– And how was the foot in the end, man? Because we walked a lot...
01:01:04.619 --> 01:01:06.610
– It was everything on foot! And today is such a piece of cake
01:01:06.610 --> 01:01:10.160
– A piece of cake, man. When they come here now, there is a road.
01:01:10.160 --> 01:01:16.000
– Yes, it goes everywhere. – And the hunger! Every time we were hungry,
01:01:16.000 --> 01:01:21.000
we couldn't carry the water. – We could only carry the three little canteens like this. – Exactly
01:01:21.690 --> 01:01:23.390
By the time we worked there,
01:01:24.490 --> 01:01:28.110
Artur and I asked her permission to come in.
01:01:28.760 --> 01:01:35.650
We boned animals, huge bones,
01:01:35.650 --> 01:01:39.112
and he dwelled that didn't
want us to keep doing it.
01:01:40.196 --> 01:01:42.073
And then goes from here, from there,
01:01:42.073 --> 01:01:44.784
I just know he got crossed at and defied her.
01:01:45.535 --> 01:01:47.745
So he hired a gunslinger,
01:01:47.745 --> 01:01:52.375
ordered him to stay in the
road to kill Niède Guidon.
01:02:09.892 --> 01:02:11.727
I went to the local radio station
01:02:11.727 --> 01:02:15.565
and told them that
I would come here and
01:02:15.565 --> 01:02:18.234
If they wanted to kill me,
they could come here.
01:02:18.234 --> 01:02:23.406
Because I would be here, nearby the Antunião
and set up the time and everything else.
01:02:23.698 --> 01:02:25.825
When a bearer came, also after you
01:02:25.825 --> 01:02:29.787
Nièden Guidon asked
you to come on the letter,
01:02:29.787 --> 01:02:31.581
I came and she said
01:02:31.581 --> 01:02:34.041
"Mister João, I want you to drop this
01:02:34.041 --> 01:02:36.043
so I can go together with you"
01:02:36.043 --> 01:02:39.297
and told me all the story. There
were about four cars over there,
01:02:39.297 --> 01:02:41.299
the Police was also there
01:02:41.299 --> 01:02:43.634
and we backed off.
01:02:43.801 --> 01:02:45.595
I took the machete,
01:02:46.721 --> 01:02:48.431
took it in the hands
01:02:48.639 --> 01:02:49.932
and we were in a car,
01:02:49.932 --> 01:02:54.020
a police car in front of us,
01:02:54.020 --> 01:02:56.397
another two in the back and hers in the middle.
01:02:56.397 --> 01:02:58.399
When we arrived, we already knew his name,
01:02:58.399 --> 01:03:01.068
he was trying to touch her car
01:03:01.068 --> 01:03:04.155
An ambush?
Yes, an ambush.
01:03:37.480 --> 01:03:39.982
He arrived, he let the cars go
01:03:39.982 --> 01:03:43.300
and was carrying a rifle
01:03:43.770 --> 01:03:44.980
Wow!
01:03:45.000 --> 01:03:47.980
He was just prepared!
He was prepared!
01:03:55.915 --> 01:04:01.754
The doctor always looked for the
workforce with the people of the communities,
01:04:01.754 --> 01:04:07.176
it was a way to help the people here to turn around...
01:04:07.176 --> 01:04:10.471
here all the people went out to work. Here,
there was only one kind of agriculture,
01:04:10.471 --> 01:04:15.142
and it was small, very small.
Small farming, familiar agriculture.
01:04:15.142 --> 01:04:18.896
So the people to survive
had to win out there.
01:04:18.896 --> 01:04:24.277
Then, with her arrival, she gave a lot of opportunity for families
01:04:24.277 --> 01:04:26.028
to work and survive.
01:04:26.112 --> 01:04:30.575
Many of them work and began to work with the excavation
01:04:30.575 --> 01:04:32.577
they make money with the excavation and afterwards
01:04:32.577 --> 01:04:37.290
some of them were contracted and
they continue working until today.
01:04:37.373 --> 01:04:43.296
All of them here have learned from
us to do all this fine excavation work.
01:04:43.296 --> 01:04:47.550
Because it would be impossible here in Piauí in a place so far, in such a difficult
01:04:47.550 --> 01:04:50.469
place we work exclusively with students.
01:04:50.469 --> 01:04:52.471
So we train the local staff
01:04:52.471 --> 01:04:55.725
and they already know how to do all sorts of technical jobs.
01:04:55.808 --> 01:05:00.479
There was a time here that we
worked only in the collection 40 people,
01:05:00.479 --> 01:05:04.400
sometimes in 35 people,
when it was really accelerated.
01:05:04.400 --> 01:05:07.612
We got to work among 40 people.
01:05:11.282 --> 01:05:15.328
Zé worked on the "litter"
01:05:15.328 --> 01:05:17.330
he was the topographer.
01:05:17.330 --> 01:05:21.709
Aurelio, who is my brother-in-law.
01:05:21.709 --> 01:05:25.129
And there was Zé of the plaster,
01:05:25.129 --> 01:05:28.841
who took that corpse.
01:05:28.841 --> 01:05:35.181
With his intelligence and with the help
of Dr. Niède, she was creating the professionals.
01:05:35.181 --> 01:05:39.602
The beginning of our discovery in our community.
01:05:40.686 --> 01:05:48.319
Here you are all the parents she gave work to, there. On "Pedra Furada".
01:05:48.819 --> 01:05:53.282
There's Lourenço. Moreno, Zé Ney,
01:05:53.282 --> 01:05:56.619
Zé, Elsimar, Moreno...
01:05:56.619 --> 01:06:00.665
Seu Nivaldo, Régis, son of Seu Nivaldo,
01:06:00.665 --> 01:06:03.626
who belonged to the pottery
work. The Liomar...
01:06:04.335 --> 01:06:08.923
All the excavations around that area I participated in.
01:06:08.923 --> 01:06:12.426
At the time I started digging
and then became a surveyor.
01:06:12.510 --> 01:06:14.762
I started doing all the topography work,
01:06:14.762 --> 01:06:18.391
drawing.
01:06:18.391 --> 01:06:23.270
In this plan here I show the location
01:06:23.312 --> 01:06:26.273
of the part found and the part number.
01:06:26.273 --> 01:06:29.527
How long have you been doing this? How many years. Fours years
01:06:29.527 --> 01:06:32.488
What did you do before?
I used to work on the crops.
01:06:32.488 --> 01:06:36.075
There in the site of the
Mei we broke a lot of stone,
01:06:36.075 --> 01:06:40.454
very large blocks and we
always removing what we could
01:06:41.497 --> 01:06:47.712
always, hoping to find something important.
01:06:48.087 --> 01:06:52.299
We always worked until the end
of the site. Sharp tips and sledgehammer,
01:06:52.299 --> 01:06:55.761
and we'd carefully removed the
pieces of stone and carried them out.
01:06:56.303 --> 01:07:00.975
It was a very delicate service
that we could never do at will
01:07:00.975 --> 01:07:04.186
like when you just break.
01:07:04.186 --> 01:07:09.859
You have to wait to find
something, and if you're there,
01:07:09.859 --> 01:07:13.446
we can not destroy it. A precious thing for this kind of work.
01:07:15.239 --> 01:07:20.161
The first human skeleton we
found here in "Barra do Antunião"
01:07:20.161 --> 01:07:25.124
is a site where many fossils have already
been found and this is very important for us
01:07:25.124 --> 01:07:29.962
because we already have
the tools of this man and
01:07:29.962 --> 01:07:33.507
will find the author of these tools.
01:07:33.507 --> 01:07:36.135
We must also study this situation
01:07:36.135 --> 01:07:39.513
to see if he was there
and he was crushed,
01:07:39.513 --> 01:07:43.517
he could be lying down asleep, and
was overwhelmed, crushed by the stone
01:07:43.517 --> 01:07:50.107
or if it is a recent grave that was
completely crushed by this stone.
01:07:50.399 --> 01:07:54.820
So yes, we search for ancient graves.
01:07:54.820 --> 01:08:01.410
But this makes us wonder if in the
Pleistocene the men buried their dead.
01:08:01.410 --> 01:08:04.205
And we have no trace of it.
01:08:06.540 --> 01:08:10.753
You can bury the dead next to where you live,
01:08:10.753 --> 01:08:12.546
or you can bury the dead
01:08:12.546 --> 01:08:14.256
in completely lost places.
01:08:15.925 --> 01:08:20.346
We found eight skeletons. Eight.
01:08:20.346 --> 01:08:22.348
Two in urns
01:08:22.348 --> 01:08:27.478
one lying on a bed of dry leaves.
01:08:27.478 --> 01:08:31.315
They were different habits, you see.
01:08:31.899 --> 01:08:35.528
For example, if all graves are in an urn,
01:08:36.445 --> 01:08:41.158
the funeral custom was in an urn.
01:08:41.575 --> 01:08:46.580
We do not know. If we take the current
Indian world, everyone is incinerated.
01:08:46.580 --> 01:08:48.958
There's nothing left.
01:08:48.958 --> 01:08:53.838
It is not because we did not find graves or human remains
01:08:53.838 --> 01:08:56.006
that there were no men.
01:08:56.006 --> 01:08:58.968
There is no need for drivers
01:08:58.968 --> 01:08:59.844
to say that cars exist.
01:09:00.886 --> 01:09:04.265
The people of "Boqueirão
da Pedra Furada", there nobody died.
01:09:04.265 --> 01:09:08.811
It does not have a skeleton to the base. We wonder if they die.
01:09:08.811 --> 01:09:10.813
Or migrate.
01:09:10.813 --> 01:09:13.023
And I wonder if in the Pedra do Gongo
01:09:13.065 --> 01:09:15.818
it was not people from
"Boqueirão of Pedra Furada",
01:09:15.818 --> 01:09:18.153
cause it is not far.
01:10:12.708 --> 01:10:17.129
We have some sites that demonstrate
the coexistence of human groups
01:10:17.129 --> 01:10:20.674
with the paleofauna, the
pleistocene fauna, the megafauna.
01:10:20.674 --> 01:10:23.177
We will have sites with the bones of the paleofauna,
01:10:23.177 --> 01:10:26.555
with fossilized bones: giant armadillo,
01:10:26.555 --> 01:10:28.557
giant sloth, saber-toothed tiger,
01:10:28.557 --> 01:10:33.103
mastodon, macrauquenia.
Both in some ponds and in some caves,
01:10:33.103 --> 01:10:37.733
with archaeological material as well.
They are paleontological and archaeological sites
01:10:40.319 --> 01:10:42.571
– This is paleontology.
01:10:43.030 --> 01:10:48.077
– Surely there are megafauna
colleagues in the background.
01:10:49.078 --> 01:10:51.121
We find...
01:10:52.373 --> 01:10:53.499
this site...
01:10:53.499 --> 01:10:55.417
which is an extremely rare site
01:10:55.417 --> 01:10:58.003
because it dates back to
11,000, 12,000 years ago
01:10:58.003 --> 01:11:01.924
when we found a
Scelidodon, a big sloth,
01:11:01.924 --> 01:11:08.264
that was killed young.
01:11:08.305 --> 01:11:12.810
We found traces of
cuts in the bones.
01:11:12.810 --> 01:11:16.939
It is the proof for the first
time we have in the "Serra",
01:11:16.939 --> 01:11:21.694
the association man
and scelidodon, megafauna.
01:12:36.101 --> 01:12:41.315
– You start in the corner so I'm going to make the first little hole, which I will measure later.
01:12:47.237 --> 01:12:55.820
– John! Get this one out! Take it to help and
give it back. Get it over there and I'll use it.
01:12:58.916 --> 01:13:03.170
This is the first time
we have found megafauna,
01:13:03.378 --> 01:13:08.300
the megafauna associated
with archaeological materials.
01:13:08.300 --> 01:13:12.096
It is another fragment of the
Eremotherium, well, of Scelidodon
01:13:12.096 --> 01:13:17.351
which is a sloth smaller than 2 or 3 meters.
01:13:17.351 --> 01:13:23.107
Here we see fractures. Here
we see a characteristic fracture
01:13:23.107 --> 01:13:26.527
of something that was
massacred by such an instrument.
01:13:28.779 --> 01:13:30.989
It was not found practically associated.
01:13:30.989 --> 01:13:35.202
They are instruments that massacre the bones.
01:13:39.039 --> 01:13:44.253
Fractures are characteristic of
fresh bones in a spiral fracture.
01:13:44.253 --> 01:13:47.131
We know therefore that this animal died
01:13:47.131 --> 01:13:49.633
probably of natural death
but that immediately afterwards
01:13:49.633 --> 01:13:54.304
the man fractured the bones,
perhaps to pick up the marrow.
01:13:54.388 --> 01:13:58.684
Because the paleofauna that
existed until about 10 thousand years ago,
01:13:58.684 --> 01:14:02.813
it needed perennial plants,
most of the paleofauna animals,
01:14:02.813 --> 01:14:06.733
they are herbivores, they are big
and they need many leaves to survive
01:14:06.733 --> 01:14:10.904
and they need water. So it could
not be the caatinga until 10,000 years ago.
01:14:10.904 --> 01:14:13.323
It had to be a forest environment,
01:14:13.323 --> 01:14:19.329
a mixed forest environment so the savannah environment was more open so the animals
01:14:19.329 --> 01:14:23.709
could move, but it could have been practically the most tropical forest here in the region.
01:14:23.709 --> 01:14:26.044
Here was Paradise.
01:14:27.504 --> 01:14:31.258
Very rich, very much indeed
with all that they needed
01:14:31.258 --> 01:14:34.511
to be able to live peacefully
01:14:34.511 --> 01:14:38.724
in the way the Paleolithic men lived then.
01:14:38.724 --> 01:14:41.435
The life they had here was very nice
01:14:41.435 --> 01:14:43.604
that allowed all of this, you know !?
01:14:43.604 --> 01:14:47.566
If they had gone hungry, if it had been dry, diseases
01:14:47.566 --> 01:14:49.902
and all this would not have time.
01:14:49.902 --> 01:14:56.200
I think it shows that life here was really a life in a place of pleasure.
01:14:56.825 --> 01:15:00.245
It had food, had water, had the beauty of the region.
01:15:00.245 --> 01:15:03.540
I think everything has expired.
01:15:27.689 --> 01:15:30.440
The region up to 9 thousand years ago,
01:15:30.500 --> 01:15:33.040
our research showed that it was here
01:15:33.380 --> 01:15:40.744
in the high plateau of the Amazon Forest. Down here in the plain the Atlantic Forest.
01:15:40.911 --> 01:15:45.249
Two different biomes with different fauna and floras,
01:15:45.249 --> 01:15:49.753
very rich, lots of water and have stayed here all this time.
01:15:49.878 --> 01:15:54.716
The topography of North America and South America is not the same
01:15:54.716 --> 01:15:58.220
as that of 12,000 years ago.
01:15:58.220 --> 01:16:05.811
A current coastal site may be
a holocene coastal site or
01:16:05.811 --> 01:16:09.231
a pleistocene inland site.
01:16:09.231 --> 01:16:17.281
And now the sea is 10 meters away,
but 25,000 years ago, it was 40 km or 50 km.
01:16:17.364 --> 01:16:21.451
And the sea then occupied all this region
01:16:21.535 --> 01:16:26.331
to the plain. I mean São Raimundo
Nonato, all this area here was beach,
01:16:27.082 --> 01:16:30.961
then there was a tectonic
movement that raised the mountains
01:16:30.961 --> 01:16:32.462
and threw the sea there to Ceará.
01:16:32.462 --> 01:16:35.841
And we see the park a bit out here right.
01:16:35.841 --> 01:16:40.304
And we see that it is formed on this edge here plated
01:16:40.304 --> 01:16:43.807
by a succession of
cannyons that we call here
01:16:43.807 --> 01:16:46.190
"baixão", right.
01:16:46.720 --> 01:16:50.397
A valley that was ancient drainage
01:16:50.397 --> 01:16:56.111
that flowed rivers inside these "baixões", of these cannyons.
01:16:56.278 --> 01:17:00.324
We have the São Francisco Basin,
we have the Parnaíba Basin,
01:17:00.324 --> 01:17:07.497
the Tocantins Basin so we are in the middle of the basins, it is in a displacement location,
01:17:07.497 --> 01:17:11.168
so it is a place of convergence of human groups,
01:17:11.209 --> 01:17:13.545
is an outlet location.
01:17:24.931 --> 01:17:28.518
The Serra da Capivara represented
01:17:28.518 --> 01:17:34.608
a total change. Because it was said that the man had arrived,
01:17:34.608 --> 01:17:39.029
coming from Asia, arrived here in North America some 13,000 years ago,
01:17:39.029 --> 01:17:41.907
and then came to South America.
01:17:41.907 --> 01:17:45.535
Inside this structure we find charcoal
01:17:45.535 --> 01:17:49.498
and, next to it, chipped stone
.Chipped Stone utensils.
01:17:49.498 --> 01:17:55.295
So you told someone to date that coal? Exactly, this coal was dated and it was given 48,700 years.
01:17:55.587 --> 01:18:00.008
Could it have been a natural fire?
No, because if it were a natural fire,
01:18:00.008 --> 01:18:03.595
we would have to find a
litter of coal, wouldn’t we?
01:18:03.595 --> 01:18:06.973
Or a tree that burned. It would
thus leave it in the shape of the tree.
01:18:07.057 --> 01:18:11.019
This coal, no. It is within that
structure. There is nothing outside.
01:18:11.436 --> 01:18:14.314
I knew very well their work technique.
01:18:14.314 --> 01:18:18.693
I knew that everything that they
claimed It was right, was actually wrong.
01:18:18.693 --> 01:18:22.906
They were based in a discovery
that wasn't even done by archaeologists,
01:18:22.906 --> 01:18:25.826
by excavations that were still on course, and,
01:18:25.826 --> 01:18:30.789
with only one piece of information, made up the theory that was applied to all America settlement.
01:18:30.789 --> 01:18:32.916
You can't do it.
01:18:32.916 --> 01:18:38.713
You must have a lot of information about
the whole America to reach any conclusions.
01:18:38.713 --> 01:18:41.758
Today, it's possible to
raise different hypothesis.
01:18:43.051 --> 01:18:48.849
But, only data allowed us,
then, to define the reality.
01:18:48.849 --> 01:18:52.102
This controversy, this discussion
of settlement, wherever it came from,
01:18:52.102 --> 01:18:56.106
is super healthy. As long as
it's not an imperialist thing,
01:18:56.106 --> 01:19:02.946
and you try to say it's because we do not know how to verify, we do not know how to work.
01:19:02.946 --> 01:19:06.700
Until 20,000 years the Americans
accept, Niède said that much.
01:19:06.700 --> 01:19:09.453
It means that up to 20 thousand years we
know how to work, that's what happened.
01:19:09.453 --> 01:19:11.455
And we have other pleistocene sites.
01:19:11.455 --> 01:19:16.042
The "Sitio do Meio", right? With a possibility
of dating 25 thousand years and a little more;
01:19:16.042 --> 01:19:20.839
"Vale da Pedra Furada", with a
calibrated dating of 22, 23 thousand years;
01:19:20.839 --> 01:19:24.176
the "Tirapéia" with dating
also of 23 thousand years.
01:19:24.176 --> 01:19:30.056
So we have in the region several
sites that have a chronology prior to Clovis.
01:19:30.056 --> 01:19:33.185
This is very important for the region
and for the settlement of America.
01:19:33.185 --> 01:19:36.771
These people arrived here
about 100 thousand years ago,
01:19:36.771 --> 01:19:39.065
originating from Africa,
01:19:39.065 --> 01:19:41.860
because Africa passed a period of great drought
01:19:41.860 --> 01:19:46.323
130 thousand years ago that caused
the origin of the deserts and all.
01:19:46.323 --> 01:19:49.993
So they went out into the sea to look for food.
01:19:49.993 --> 01:19:53.622
And the winds and tides bring them
here, and they came to end here, didn’t they?
01:19:54.289 --> 01:19:58.043
We will have here a skeleton
with the elongated skull,
01:19:58.043 --> 01:20:00.545
which is Zuzu
we call Zuzu here
01:20:00.545 --> 01:20:03.465
just like Luzia, right?
From Minas Gerais.
01:20:03.632 --> 01:20:07.844
What are we going to have in
Brazil, both the arrival of groups
01:20:07.844 --> 01:20:10.701
that come directly from an Asian region, with a flattened skull,
01:20:11.056 --> 01:20:14.539
as right groups...
That's all Sapiens, okay?
01:20:14.570 --> 01:20:21.483
as for the groups that came with an offspring that is much more similar
01:20:21.483 --> 01:20:24.653
to the Australian Aborigines and African
01:20:24.653 --> 01:20:27.072
than to the Amerindian. Because
it is this Indian who was in Brazil.
01:20:27.197 --> 01:20:32.702
Here was the first place
that we had these ancient datings.
01:20:33.370 --> 01:20:35.455
After it, there was also Chile
01:20:35.455 --> 01:20:40.252
and, nowadays, about
three, four months ago,
01:20:40.252 --> 01:20:46.967
in the United States they found a site with a dating of 130 thousand years.
01:20:47.676 --> 01:20:51.429
And now, then, we also have one
in Uruguay of 33 thousand years too,
01:20:51.429 --> 01:20:57.310
in Mexico they found a young lady's
skeleton dated of 17 thousand years
01:20:57.310 --> 01:21:01.273
with Asian and African DNA,
01:21:01.350 --> 01:21:02.270
what means…
01:21:02.390 --> 01:21:09.447
And here, all the natives I've met
had a very dark skin, dark hair,
01:21:09.447 --> 01:21:13.076
do you know what I mean? It means that
they were, clearly, African descendents.
01:21:26.631 --> 01:21:30.218
It's possible to make a
high level Scientific research.
01:21:30.218 --> 01:21:33.179
If it's a research According
the international standards.
01:21:33.179 --> 01:21:37.392
One research that today, as someone once said
before, places Piauí in the Scientific Global Map.
01:21:37.475 --> 01:21:41.896
We have achieved extremely
important scientific results,
01:21:41.896 --> 01:21:46.860
which are having a very great
repercussion at an international level.
01:21:46.860 --> 01:21:51.948
We got the teaching results,
extremely important for me,
01:21:51.990 --> 01:21:55.952
which was to form a local, high-level,
young team at Federal do Piauí,
01:21:55.952 --> 01:21:59.789
who can continue the work,
01:21:59.789 --> 01:22:02.751
because the work of São Raimundo
Nonato is in the beginning.
01:22:02.751 --> 01:22:07.297
We continue to find deposits
of the highest importance,
01:22:07.297 --> 01:22:11.468
not only for archeology, but for the
understanding of the evolution
01:22:11.468 --> 01:22:16.473
of the climate and of the installation
of human life and animals that lived
01:22:16.473 --> 01:22:19.684
in a biological community in this region.
01:22:19.684 --> 01:22:25.523
And we have, today, a team
that can continue this work.
01:22:25.523 --> 01:22:29.819
And besides, we also have another
achievement, which is this museum,
01:22:29.819 --> 01:22:35.325
which I think within maybe 4 years,
we will be together here to open it.
01:22:35.325 --> 01:22:39.996
And this museum is the return that the
researcher must give to the community.
01:22:39.996 --> 01:22:44.000
That is, it is the show of the
researcher's respect for the community
01:22:44.000 --> 01:22:48.880
that maintains his research,
he wants to know what wants to learn.
01:22:48.880 --> 01:22:52.258
It is also a way of collaborating
01:22:52.258 --> 01:22:55.970
for the cultural and scientific
development of the country.
01:22:55.970 --> 01:22:59.557
I just want to thank everyone.
Thank you very much.
01:23:40.598 --> 01:23:43.977
When it was declared as humanity heritage,
01:23:43.977 --> 01:23:49.441
the Brazilian government was
obliged to make a whole protection system.
01:23:50.567 --> 01:23:53.820
So then, Itamaraty asked France
01:23:53.820 --> 01:23:56.573
to borrow me for making project come true.
01:23:56.573 --> 01:24:01.494
Because they claimed that nobody in Brazil had
the knowledge required to make this task. Well,
01:24:01.494 --> 01:24:06.416
I was an archaeologist, but I couldn't make
a project for a Park protection, could I?
01:24:06.916 --> 01:24:10.128
So I traveled to visit several
humanity heritages around the world,
01:24:10.128 --> 01:24:13.423
to see how they organized themselves
01:24:13.423 --> 01:24:16.509
so I could understand how I
needed to organize myself too, right?
01:24:16.509 --> 01:24:19.637
And then, France gave me a commission,
01:24:19.721 --> 01:24:22.807
I came here and started to
make from the sketch…
01:24:22.807 --> 01:24:27.353
First of all, I went to visit all the
region and then started making the project.
01:24:50.043 --> 01:24:53.213
What the heck is that?
01:24:56.049 --> 01:24:58.968
Oh, the monkey are here…
01:25:02.180 --> 01:25:04.349
What is happening here?
01:25:07.393 --> 01:25:10.271
Look at the little monkey over there.
01:25:16.986 --> 01:25:18.988
Oh no… good morning.
01:25:18.988 --> 01:25:22.158
-Are you coming in, ma'am? I'll come in. What just happened here? No, it's the tourists, ma'am...
01:25:22.158 --> 01:25:25.537
Ok, the tourists, alright. Ah, the tourists, that's fine. Do you open the door for me there? Thanks.
01:25:27.247 --> 01:25:33.253
What tourists are ...? Ah! They must be doing... The monkeys. It is.
01:25:34.921 --> 01:25:39.259
The monkeys arrived. When the drought comes, they come here.
01:25:40.093 --> 01:25:42.178
There's water... There's food...
01:25:46.599 --> 01:25:50.520
I used to run along the whole park, went everywhere. I would go to the painting sites
01:25:50.520 --> 01:25:54.816
to see if the conservation was
being done well, if there was no problem.
01:25:54.816 --> 01:25:56.818
Because sometimes, when there was a great rain,
01:25:56.818 --> 01:25:59.988
the rain damaged one part and it started to drain on everything.
01:25:59.988 --> 01:26:04.701
So I had to do something to save those paintings. I made the pingadeiras "holes"
01:26:04.701 --> 01:26:07.245
as we called them here, so as not to let the rain drain on the paintings.
01:26:07.245 --> 01:26:12.292
So I did all this surveillance
system for that preservation, right?
01:26:12.750 --> 01:26:14.961
Because, finally,
01:26:15.628 --> 01:26:21.301
Unesco declared that the Foundation
01:26:21.301 --> 01:26:23.303
is responsible for the
protection of Serra da Capivara.
01:26:23.720 --> 01:26:29.684
And whose name is there? Niède Guidon. I mean, Unesco, I am the responsible one to Unesco.
01:26:30.059 --> 01:26:33.479
We are transforming this site into an open-air Museum.
01:26:33.479 --> 01:26:37.108
What we had, the
sponsorship from Banco do Brasil.
01:26:37.108 --> 01:26:39.110
We built these prop walls,
01:26:39.110 --> 01:26:42.822
that prevent landslides from the previous diggings we've done.
01:26:42.822 --> 01:26:46.534
It preserves that part over
there - the oldest part,
01:26:46.534 --> 01:26:51.247
that is still under the blocks -,
that may be excavated in the future,
01:26:51.247 --> 01:26:54.208
when there will be
more advanced technologies.
01:26:54.334 --> 01:26:57.670
We will build a footbridge
that will take the tourist really close,
01:26:57.670 --> 01:27:02.175
at the same height that the paintings are,however 2 meters away, for them not being touched.
01:27:02.175 --> 01:27:07.170
– Well, now I'm going to see from far away. I have seen it close.
01:27:09.170 --> 01:27:13.170
– Ítala, don't fall again, because it's gonna be very annoying...
01:27:16.230 --> 01:27:20.485
We will constitute a tourist complex
where the visitor will have the museum
01:27:20.485 --> 01:27:25.156
with the pieces, with all the explanation,
and the National Park of Serra da Capivara.
01:27:25.156 --> 01:27:29.410
We are going to work together with
IBAMA in order to provide a complete visiting,
01:27:29.410 --> 01:27:32.997
showing a vision, the
scientific vision in the museum,
01:27:32.997 --> 01:27:35.959
and the natural
vision, in the Park.
01:27:35.959 --> 01:27:39.295
And through this visitation,
this tourist fluency,
01:27:39.295 --> 01:27:42.340
I think we will be able
to reach self-sufficiency.
01:28:53.786 --> 01:28:56.372
Today, when you are
going to write a story,
01:28:56.372 --> 01:29:01.002
you then write, for example,
"John went to the site,
01:29:01.002 --> 01:29:03.004
took the donkey and
brought back the donkey."
01:29:03.004 --> 01:29:05.631
They could not write that with letters.
01:29:06.132 --> 01:29:08.593
But they drew.
01:29:10.178 --> 01:29:14.932
So, there's a body deformation,
a deformation that shows
01:29:14.932 --> 01:29:18.353
they no fear of being what they were.
01:29:18.353 --> 01:29:23.691
Do you want to try this gesture?
For example, as they were there.
01:29:23.691 --> 01:29:26.027
Or as he was there...
01:29:26.027 --> 01:29:29.822
One infront of the other,
or all the positions...
01:29:29.822 --> 01:29:33.117
As you wish....right?
01:29:33.576 --> 01:29:38.623
There, for instance, the stone has
no bottom. They could realize this.
01:29:48.007 --> 01:29:51.928
See? More and more you
discover some other details, right?
01:29:56.933 --> 01:30:00.645
This figure of the man
who carries the animal, is the ...?
01:30:00.645 --> 01:30:03.064
Notice here
01:30:03.064 --> 01:30:08.069
with all the force he evokes and there, put him on high?
01:30:08.069 --> 01:30:12.406
It's the same as it repeats there.
So why do they repeat it?
01:30:12.406 --> 01:30:18.830
Why do they repeat the same figures?
Same elements? The same attitudes...
01:30:18.830 --> 01:30:21.958
Why will it be?
01:30:38.766 --> 01:30:43.521
Hands as identity, right? As a way of
saying, "I'm here." Huh? "I'm from here."
01:30:43.521 --> 01:30:48.693
"I leave my clues here
for you to see me."
01:30:51.654 --> 01:30:53.823
Tree little people. Right there, look. Look, “the hands”, are like this.
01:30:56.784 --> 01:30:58.995
An who can see a giant bird, among all, all these figures population? Huh?
01:30:58.995 --> 01:31:03.916
Right over there. There is an animal there. It seems to be a monkey with…
01:31:03.916 --> 01:31:05.910
So here is a population indeed...
01:31:13.718 --> 01:31:18.431
– And I found a photo of 1961,
01:31:18.431 --> 01:31:21.058
when I was doing archeology in Paris.
01:31:21.058 --> 01:31:26.939
– With Luciana Palestrini, with Andrea,
my friend there, and other colleagues.
01:31:29.275 --> 01:31:34.655
– In 61. When I did archeology
in Paris. in 61. And what is this?
01:31:38.576 --> 01:31:41.704
– Good Morning!
– Good Morning!
01:31:43.789 --> 01:31:48.961
– Niède, they are all astonished here with the... – Oh, have you brought all these kids in?
01:31:48.961 --> 01:31:54.342
– All of them wanted to have a têt-à-têt with you.
– Têt-à-têt, like this?
01:31:54.342 --> 01:32:00.264
– Yes!
– Isn’t Serra Branca really beautiful?
01:32:00.264 --> 01:32:01.307
Yes!
01:32:01.307 --> 01:32:03.684
– Did you see? We don’t know which
is the most beautiful in the Park,
01:32:03.726 --> 01:32:07.855
if it is the Sitio do mocó, If it is the
Serra Branca, everything is so beautiful, isn’t it?
01:32:07.855 --> 01:32:09.106
Yes!
01:32:09.106 --> 01:32:12.860
– That’s it. You are the ones
who will protect this all, ok?
01:32:12.860 --> 01:32:17.156
– They are guardians.
– Do not let anyone destroy anything. Fine?
01:32:17.615 --> 01:32:19.742
– Because Serra da
Capivara, there is nothing like
01:32:19.742 --> 01:32:22.745
it all over the world.
That's right?
01:32:22.745 --> 01:32:27.708
– That is the dripping system and… And there
is the pot and after it goes down there?
01:32:27.708 --> 01:32:29.543
– When it rains.
01:32:29.543 --> 01:32:33.297
– Right there one
in yellow, look...
01:32:33.589 --> 01:32:37.301
– I had not seen it yet. Also
these deer with geometric
01:32:37.468 --> 01:32:40.805
fillings and that human
being there are fantastic.
01:32:41.013 --> 01:32:43.015
– It is a lot of diversity, right? Of...
01:32:43.015 --> 01:32:45.017
– It is a shame no one… – of filling.
01:32:45.017 --> 01:32:48.646
– Make sure you publish this properly. Has Anne Marie taken a picture of it already?
01:32:48.646 --> 01:32:48.896
Yes she has.
01:32:48.896 --> 01:32:52.692
– It is a lot to publish, right?
– Yeap, a lot.
01:32:56.570 --> 01:33:02.243
– Hard work. – Did you like the stools we made here? – This one is awesome, isn’t it?– Yeap.
01:33:05.329 --> 01:33:10.459
When the Park was opened, the local
community did not embrace the cause.
01:33:10.459 --> 01:33:15.339
Why? They were living there.
They did not want to leave their place,
01:33:15.339 --> 01:33:18.467
leave their place, or even stop hunting,
01:33:18.467 --> 01:33:20.636
to kill the animals.
01:33:20.636 --> 01:33:24.432
So for them, someone reaches
adulthood and say, "look, this is forbidden,
01:33:24.432 --> 01:33:26.600
you can not do this,
this will end with nature"
01:33:26.600 --> 01:33:31.605
for them it made no sense.
It was highly out of their context.
01:33:31.605 --> 01:33:37.611
So it was there that the doctor had the
idea of... That would have to start with
01:33:37.611 --> 01:33:41.407
the children, because only then she
would create a generation of defenders.
01:33:41.407 --> 01:33:44.660
Of protectors.
And do not hammer
01:33:44.660 --> 01:33:49.332
in the head of those who...
who already had made up their minds.
01:33:49.332 --> 01:33:53.836
I would hire people to work with me and I
noticed that they did not know how to write.
01:33:53.836 --> 01:34:02.053
And then Italy signed a contract in which it was
going to build five schools around the Park.
01:34:02.887 --> 01:34:06.640
I was going to train the teachers
and keep them for five years.
01:34:06.640 --> 01:34:13.689
And after five years, the prefectures and the
state government would then continue.
01:34:13.856 --> 01:34:17.318
They had the regular program courses
01:34:17.318 --> 01:34:22.114
and then they had music,
painting, art courses, you know?
01:34:34.460 --> 01:34:37.546
The moment you
embody these paintings
01:34:37.546 --> 01:34:40.216
and you integrate
them into the present,
01:34:40.216 --> 01:34:43.010
then it is no longer
an archeology of the past.
01:34:43.010 --> 01:34:45.554
I mean, you already have
the past and the present,
01:34:45.554 --> 01:34:49.016
and it's all the time - right? -,
looking for some thrill in the future.
01:34:50.309 --> 01:34:52.937
I mean, focusing on
the future, right?
01:34:52.937 --> 01:34:55.481
I mean, it's like a river, right?
01:34:55.481 --> 01:34:57.983
Past, present and future beginning to blend.
01:34:57.983 --> 01:35:00.319
Today I work with the children of the dance students.
01:35:00.319 --> 01:35:04.198
And the parents were the
first to find Niède Guidon.
01:35:04.281 --> 01:35:08.035
So there's a whole
connection, so a rhizome, right?
01:35:08.077 --> 01:35:09.829
Of affective bonds.
01:35:25.761 --> 01:35:32.309
The children, which was the main goal,
these we managed to achieve, yes.
01:35:32.309 --> 01:35:35.688
These are defenders of the Park today.
01:35:36.689 --> 01:35:39.400
They are, we have the young defenders,
01:35:39.400 --> 01:35:43.028
we have them, the guides of the Park,
01:35:43.070 --> 01:35:47.158
we have people who have got
their degrees - right? - in archaeology.
01:35:47.158 --> 01:35:50.619
Today we have people even
with a doctorate degree.
01:35:50.619 --> 01:35:53.706
Who are there. And they are
working in favor of the Park.
01:35:53.706 --> 01:35:57.334
And it was very important because
many people could get a degree,
01:35:57.334 --> 01:35:59.712
including people who work with us today.
01:35:59.712 --> 01:36:05.050
They then did these schools,
and in schools they really learned.
01:36:05.050 --> 01:36:10.139
First, the entire course was
given by specialized teachers.
01:36:10.139 --> 01:36:13.893
And they also learned what
the rights of people are, right?
01:39:05.439 --> 01:39:10.402
Here there are sites that were destroyed
by fires and everything related to it.
01:39:10.402 --> 01:39:14.657
So, the population itself
knows how important this is and
01:39:14.657 --> 01:39:18.452
so, it increases the
chances of preserving it.
01:39:18.452 --> 01:39:22.039
Our relatives, our relatives,
have given up "all this land" here.
01:39:22.039 --> 01:39:26.627
It was not for the little money
they received at the time.
01:39:26.627 --> 01:39:32.508
It was that they began to understand that...
There had to be this here in the area.
01:39:32.508 --> 01:39:37.554
And if it were not for that park here...
01:39:37.554 --> 01:39:40.808
Maybe "my grandchildren"
today "was" difficult to "meet"
01:39:40.808 --> 01:39:45.854
a deer, a caititu,
an armadillo, a cotia.
01:39:45.938 --> 01:39:50.984
The fauna has developed a lot,
so today it is the largest jaguar
01:39:50.984 --> 01:39:53.862
population in the Caatinga, right?
01:39:53.862 --> 01:39:58.909
If you have the jaguar, which is at the top of the
food chain, there are all the other animals, right?
01:39:59.576 --> 01:40:05.416
It is a well preserved Caatinga. Well regenerated.
01:40:05.416 --> 01:40:09.378
Some spots that had a patch,
was regenerated, so...
01:40:09.378 --> 01:40:13.882
We see jaguar, see caititu,
see the armadillo,
01:40:13.882 --> 01:40:17.970
see the flag anteater, which was already
in extinction; a very large population of armadillos
01:40:17.970 --> 01:40:22.307
which only occurs in the Caatinga
01:40:22.516 --> 01:40:27.187
and which today has a large population;
01:40:27.187 --> 01:40:30.232
some animals that are returning,
01:40:30.232 --> 01:40:35.112
like the jawbone, that we have seen,
in some points, vestige of them;
01:40:35.112 --> 01:40:42.161
animals that have been hunted to extinction
and are coming back to the park today, right?
01:41:15.861 --> 01:41:20.199
Three... What's up, man?
01:41:47.267 --> 01:41:55.609
Thanks! This group here are...
54 monkeys when I left the group, last year.
01:41:55.609 --> 01:42:00.656
So I have to come and take care of
them so I can look at the production,
01:42:00.656 --> 01:42:04.159
how many "produced" this year that
01:42:05.202 --> 01:42:09.039
I was out so that I could know
how many people I have in the group.
01:42:09.832 --> 01:42:14.294
Because this group does not mix with others,
not them, they each have a group.
01:42:15.254 --> 01:42:18.715
Then I have to check them out, tell one, everything,
01:42:18.715 --> 01:42:20.425
to analyze.
01:42:20.425 --> 01:42:26.807
If they are all, if one is missing,
if someone has moved to another group
01:42:27.891 --> 01:42:30.561
I have to look at them all.
01:42:30.686 --> 01:42:34.565
With the monkeys I learned
twice as much as I already knew.
01:42:35.774 --> 01:42:41.029
Because everything they take here in the bush,
that they eat, getting rid of insect, you can eat too.
01:42:41.029 --> 01:42:44.324
It does not hurt at all.
Arrive in a tree, pick a fruit, eat.
01:42:44.324 --> 01:42:45.909
If they reach a tree, pick up
that fruit and eat it,
01:42:45.951 --> 01:42:48.287
you can come and eat it until you fill
your belly. You don’t need to worry.
01:43:15.647 --> 01:43:20.110
So ... I made a mistake here...
I've known this ring for many years.
01:43:20.652 --> 01:43:24.323
Since I was a kid I knew,
but these paintings,
01:43:24.323 --> 01:43:26.783
I never saw them. First I came to
meet Beth and after found them.
01:43:26.783 --> 01:43:30.871
Look, this stone here was broken.
So the man went and painted this
01:43:30.871 --> 01:43:34.166
little doll in here, oh.
Right here, he's in here...
01:43:34.166 --> 01:43:37.753
Then he went and painted another
here on the edge of this small stone,
01:43:37.753 --> 01:43:42.674
but he said "I'm going to make
it the smallest in the world".
01:43:42.674 --> 01:43:45.385
This is the one here
on this rock, oh.
01:43:46.053 --> 01:43:50.557
This is a doll, with "the arms"
up and the "legs" open, here, oh.
01:44:52.995 --> 01:44:57.582
We are seeing how to
organize the Foundation
01:44:57.582 --> 01:45:02.754
so that it can continue to work
in this direction to keep research,
01:45:02.754 --> 01:45:05.882
above all, active
in the region.
01:45:05.882 --> 01:45:10.137
Because we have
a technical reserve
01:45:10.137 --> 01:45:14.683
there with thousands and thousands
of pieces, from here in the region.
01:45:14.683 --> 01:45:18.562
All this needs, then ... Not all of
them have already been studied.
01:45:18.562 --> 01:45:21.064
There are people
studying all the time.
01:45:21.064 --> 01:45:23.066
And then there is a lot of material, including the question of protection,
01:45:23.066 --> 01:45:28.113
and the sites with paintings that are discovering new ones every time.
01:45:28.155 --> 01:45:31.408
Here in the area, now,
Eric Boëda has discovered three more.
01:45:33.577 --> 01:45:37.539
In the old days, when I was a teacher in Paris, it was I who came with my students.
01:45:37.539 --> 01:45:41.501
we came here to dig. During the summer vacation of Europe
01:45:41.585 --> 01:45:46.131
And since I'm retired it's the teacher Eric Boëda
01:45:46.131 --> 01:45:49.217
who comes every
year with his students.
01:45:50.010 --> 01:45:55.766
When we look for paintings,
we must follow the walls, thus,
01:45:55.766 --> 01:46:02.105
systematically. This is how we
discover new paintings and new sites.
01:46:05.734 --> 01:46:08.111
It's this whole area.
01:46:11.156 --> 01:46:15.118
In those 10 meters,
there is everything we need.
01:46:15.118 --> 01:46:18.038
Here business has
fallen, so is the ceiling.
01:46:18.080 --> 01:46:21.291
It was ... The vertical was here.
01:46:21.291 --> 01:46:23.460
It's a good deal indeed.
01:46:24.044 --> 01:46:27.130
Not there, because it's too small.
01:46:28.215 --> 01:46:33.720
From there. Here may be
a good space, since everything is protected,
01:46:33.720 --> 01:46:36.264
there will be no Holocene.
01:46:36.264 --> 01:46:40.018
Because they did not settle
here. You will find it here,
01:46:40.018 --> 01:46:45.398
between the edge and
the bottom of the wall.
01:46:45.398 --> 01:46:47.400
I'd start here with the Pleistocene.
01:46:49.569 --> 01:46:55.075
I thought: I will also do a technical
analysis of what nature does.
01:46:55.075 --> 01:47:01.289
I chose a place where the
man could not be present.
01:47:01.289 --> 01:47:06.586
And I did a technical analysis
of what nature produces.
01:47:06.586 --> 01:47:13.885
I got about sixty kinds.
Nature produces sixty kinds.
01:47:13.885 --> 01:47:21.726
If this material came from nature,
I would not have ten, I would have sixty.
01:47:22.602 --> 01:47:27.858
And what is more
extraordinary: of these ten types,
01:47:28.650 --> 01:47:32.779
there are only two that resemble
those found in nature.
01:47:33.029 --> 01:47:36.658
It means that of the ten
categories of objects I have here,
01:47:36.658 --> 01:47:39.327
there are eight that
nature never did.
01:47:39.703 --> 01:47:41.580
This object has a memory.
01:47:43.331 --> 01:47:47.752
The first memory
I will try to understand
01:47:47.752 --> 01:47:52.132
is the memory of how it was made.
01:47:52.591 --> 01:47:56.344
As this rubber was manufactured,
how this object was manufactured.
01:47:56.344 --> 01:48:00.515
Experimentation helps me understand
that there were four stonings...
01:48:00.515 --> 01:48:05.478
First there was the
choice of a specific stone.
01:48:05.478 --> 01:48:10.108
The choice of raw material.
A stoning, and two more,
01:48:10.108 --> 01:48:12.194
and then the work
of creating the blade.
01:48:30.086 --> 01:48:35.759
They are universal. And the ways
of constructing the instrument, what is left
01:48:35.759 --> 01:48:37.886
of the instrument, the
part that serves to hold,
01:48:37.886 --> 01:48:42.807
the one that makes the gesture,
is that which expresses the cultural differences.
01:48:56.780 --> 01:49:00.575
I'll work on the traces.
I'm going to look at the
01:49:00.575 --> 01:49:04.037
traces left on the slide
under the microscope.
01:49:04.037 --> 01:49:08.291
What we know, what
the experiments show,
01:49:08.291 --> 01:49:12.087
is that if I use such a blade on wood,
01:49:12.087 --> 01:49:16.174
I will have micro-traces
specific to the wood.
01:49:16.174 --> 01:49:18.969
If I work with a flesh,
I'll have micro-traces...
01:49:18.969 --> 01:49:23.890
So in the microscope,
if conservation is good
01:49:23.890 --> 01:49:28.103
and conservation is
good I'll know exactly
01:49:28.103 --> 01:49:34.818
what contact there was.
Wood, animal material, etc.
01:49:34.818 --> 01:49:41.283
So we know what
materials this object touched.
01:49:41.283 --> 01:49:46.329
The third question is the gesture.
Because this here, we know how it
01:49:46.329 --> 01:49:49.291
was manufactured,
we know what it is for,
01:49:49.291 --> 01:49:56.298
but there is also the gesture.
The gesture... Let's consider
01:49:56.298 --> 01:50:02.470
that when I take this,
there is a part that serves
01:50:02.470 --> 01:50:06.850
to pick up and
a transformative part.
01:50:06.850 --> 01:50:11.354
When I get this, there is
a part that is in the hand
01:50:11.354 --> 01:50:14.899
and a part that comes into
contact with something else.
01:50:14.899 --> 01:50:20.238
This object also has a
01:50:20.238 --> 01:50:22.073
picking part and
a transformative part.
01:50:22.240 --> 01:50:25.118
In other objects, there is what
we call the use function.
01:50:27.203 --> 01:50:32.625
Another important element is
that the object has a memory,
01:50:34.169 --> 01:50:38.798
a genetic memory.
01:50:38.798 --> 01:50:44.846
When I see this object,
I can now say globally
01:50:44.846 --> 01:50:50.060
that it is a characteristic
object of the period 15,000 - 17,000.
01:50:51.144 --> 01:50:53.605
Regarding other objects
on this table, I can say
01:50:53.605 --> 01:50:57.817
"this is typical of 20,000 - 25,000".
01:50:58.943 --> 01:51:04.824
I can relocate the place in
the technical lineage of the object.
01:51:42.070 --> 01:51:46.533
And today we have demonstrated,
with all this, that this people
01:51:46.533 --> 01:51:51.538
here really had a fantastic
cultural and technological capacity,
01:51:51.538 --> 01:51:57.377
because the material they have,
chipped stone, Boëda told me the other day,
01:51:57.377 --> 01:52:00.964
he said, "Look, I have some pieces
that, if I did not know they were from here,
01:52:00.964 --> 01:52:02.257
I would have thought
they were from France."
01:52:02.841 --> 01:52:07.178
And it used to be said that there
was no quality lithic technology here,
01:52:07.178 --> 01:52:09.180
because there was no research,
01:52:09.180 --> 01:52:14.018
and we have pieces of
absolutely high technology.
01:52:29.784 --> 01:52:35.457
The only link we have
between these two memories,
01:52:35.457 --> 01:52:40.753
the current memory and
the memory... is that
01:52:50.180 --> 01:52:54.058
It's the cutting edge.
01:52:57.812 --> 01:53:01.441
They are the transformative parts. In the end,
01:53:02.567 --> 01:53:05.487
it's been 3 million
years since we cut,
01:53:05.487 --> 01:53:06.613
cut,
01:53:07.989 --> 01:53:09.115
grind,
01:53:09.115 --> 01:53:10.492
drill,
01:53:10.492 --> 01:53:11.826
scratch.
01:53:18.291 --> 01:53:21.127
Perhaps the future of man
is to say that there were
01:53:21.127 --> 01:53:23.671
several origins, good,
one origin, but several
01:53:23.671 --> 01:53:27.300
different trajectories, an incredible
diversity that has developed.
01:53:27.592 --> 01:53:30.428
Let us look at this
diversity, for these solutions.
01:53:30.428 --> 01:53:33.014
Perhaps the solution of the
future is just to question
01:53:33.014 --> 01:53:35.600
the solutions of the past.
01:53:35.600 --> 01:53:38.311
This is interesting prehistory.
01:53:38.311 --> 01:53:43.274
It projects the alterity of the past
into the present, saying: beware!
01:53:43.775 --> 01:53:46.736
If we destroy otherness,
we will destroy the future.
01:56:07.960 --> 01:56:10.129
Anyone called me up?
No!
01:56:10.129 --> 01:56:13.257
No one?
01:56:50.128 --> 01:56:55.466
The important thing is to
preserve the sites and, even more, to dig them.
01:56:55.466 --> 01:57:01.347
Knowing where he went, because
he arrived in Piauí from somewhere.
01:57:01.347 --> 01:57:05.768
All you have to do is start
exploring the surrounding area.
01:57:05.768 --> 01:57:08.438
In the south of Piauí,
on the border with Maranhão,
01:57:08.438 --> 01:57:15.862
there are wonderful sites, even larger ones
than we have there in São Raimundo Nonato.
01:57:15.862 --> 01:57:21.534
Simply, no one ever researched.
These sites are being destroyed,
01:57:21.534 --> 01:57:25.747
they will be destroyed, and we will not know.
As the coastline was initially occupied,
01:57:25.747 --> 01:57:29.876
it may be that the key to all
this has been destroyed.
01:57:29.876 --> 01:57:32.962
How many shells have
been turned into lime?
01:57:32.962 --> 01:57:38.092
How many real estate projects
destroyed archaeological sites?
01:57:38.092 --> 01:57:42.013
Then, as long as we do not
have the conscience of the citizen,
01:57:42.013 --> 01:57:45.558
to know that, "well, I have discovered this,
I will stop, I will call the Ipham,
01:57:45.558 --> 01:57:48.686
make the rescue, and I
will do my work again."
01:57:48.686 --> 01:57:51.606
we will not have...
Because those pages
01:57:51.606 --> 01:57:55.401
Because those pages from a book that are
missing out there, that we have to find them all.
01:58:15.630 --> 01:58:20.968
Here we have some archaeological
tools, super interesting and
01:58:20.968 --> 01:58:25.306
Already, right?
Flint flakes... Of quartzite,
01:58:25.306 --> 01:58:29.852
tools, and... And
this stuff here, these
01:58:29.852 --> 01:58:32.647
remains of people, right?
Of human skeletons.
01:58:32.647 --> 01:58:36.234
So the site is a very promising site.
And it must have depth,
01:58:36.234 --> 01:58:40.738
we're just getting started.
Just starting the dig.
01:58:40.738 --> 01:58:46.786
And already, right? Starting,
we already find a material so close
01:58:46.786 --> 01:58:48.788
to the surface already
very, very good.
01:58:48.788 --> 01:58:55.711
Can you get another plastic bag
for us to put that segment in?
01:58:56.170 --> 01:58:59.090
Il est très fin.
01:58:59.090 --> 01:59:01.092
C'est un enfant.
01:59:04.637 --> 01:59:09.433
The difference of what we have
here in Serra da Capivara is
01:59:09.433 --> 01:59:12.103
that we have 40 years
of efforts and work.
01:59:12.103 --> 01:59:15.523
And all of these were invested here.
And money also was invested here, right?
01:59:15.523 --> 01:59:19.777
A lot of time, a lot of money,
a lot of work invested in the area.
01:59:19.777 --> 01:59:24.532
When people are checking, coming
here and seeing the size of the work,
01:59:24.532 --> 01:59:27.118
then they begin
to understand more.
01:59:27.118 --> 01:59:29.120
There are several
excavated sites, right?
01:59:29.120 --> 01:59:31.247
And there's still plenty to do,
01:59:31.247 --> 01:59:34.041
for many generations to
research and work on.
01:59:34.458 --> 01:59:37.879
The idea is that
here it is - right?
01:59:37.879 --> 01:59:42.550
a nucleus that disperses all
this part, right? Of scientific knowledge.
01:59:42.550 --> 01:59:45.136
Let him work on it,
work on the research,
01:59:45.136 --> 01:59:47.722
and at the same
time make this research
01:59:47.722 --> 01:59:49.640
serve to improve
something socially.
01:59:49.765 --> 01:59:51.559
She got the territory
01:59:51.559 --> 01:59:58.774
and organized it in such a way that
the population could benefit from it...
02:00:00.151 --> 02:00:01.110
in a way they could
open to the world.
02:00:02.069 --> 02:00:07.992
When they came to ask me to do the
program for the archeology course,
02:00:07.992 --> 02:00:10.202
they wanted to create
the course in Petrolina.
02:00:10.202 --> 02:00:12.705
I said, "Well, if it's in Petrolina,
02:00:12.705 --> 02:00:16.250
I do not do the program, only if
you create it here, because Petrolina has nothing,
02:00:16.250 --> 02:00:19.545
what will the students do there?
02:00:19.545 --> 02:00:22.173
So they set up
the campus here.
02:00:22.298 --> 02:00:25.217
This is a vision of growth, we need to
try to make the region develop, right?
02:00:25.217 --> 02:00:31.766
And the internalization of the university and such,
which has a development in this area through semiarid,
02:00:31.766 --> 02:00:35.227
basically, scientific research,
through education, right?
02:00:35.227 --> 02:00:41.567
Through also the Federal
University of the São Francisco Valley.
02:00:41.567 --> 02:00:45.363
All this together, is a project
of more than one life, right?
02:00:45.529 --> 02:00:46.864
It's a fantastic project, right?
02:00:46.864 --> 02:00:53.579
So we are preparing the future,
in terms of continuity,
02:00:53.579 --> 02:00:59.210
with these young Brazilians who
are the researchers of the future here,
02:00:59.210 --> 02:01:03.798
who will go in other
regions of the world or Brazil.
02:02:58.913 --> 02:03:02.541
And there's a bush hunt called the
bush owner, right? And the dog,
02:03:02.541 --> 02:03:07.338
"we do not see", and the dog
sees thinking it is an armadillo.
02:03:07.338 --> 02:03:13.219
It runs back, and that hunting
appears and the dog is frightened.
02:03:13.219 --> 02:03:18.849
It squats there on the floor...
back and barking and barking...
02:03:18.849 --> 02:03:21.852
You go there is no whit.
So whoever is invisible
02:03:21.852 --> 02:03:23.979
is the owner of the bush.
02:03:24.021 --> 02:03:25.815
Called "Caipora".
02:03:32.905 --> 02:03:35.032
Is there something?
02:03:36.158 --> 02:03:38.702
If you have,
get down here!
02:03:43.666 --> 02:03:48.129
Come down! Come
down here and we'll talk!
02:04:01.016 --> 02:04:04.395
You do not want to come along,
do not you, Dona Maria?
02:04:05.312 --> 02:04:08.649
There's a cigarette
here for you!
02:04:27.918 --> 02:04:31.297
You got nothing to
trade today? huh?
02:04:36.886 --> 02:04:42.308
Today was the day I was here, I brought
a little money to make a business...
02:05:12.504 --> 02:05:14.798
you do not have anything?
02:05:15.341 --> 02:05:18.552
Oh, you're "very poor" today...
02:05:20.346 --> 02:05:22.806
Well, we're going back.
02:05:24.767 --> 02:05:28.979
You have nothing to offer us.
02:05:30.105 --> 02:05:33.192
Only tomorrow? It is?
02:06:25.369 --> 02:06:26.954
Hello.
02:06:27.538 --> 02:06:29.415
Good afternoon.
02:06:30.291 --> 02:06:32.209
Yes it's me.
02:06:33.836 --> 02:06:37.631
Is it, Roseli, okay?
02:06:41.552 --> 02:06:43.178
Yes. Uhmm,
02:06:45.097 --> 02:06:46.890
yes. Uhm.
02:06:52.980 --> 02:06:58.777
OK then. Thank you
and good afternoon.
02:06:59.111 --> 02:07:03.741
Ready. Ministry of Tourism.
They come now, in August.
02:07:03.741 --> 02:07:07.578
There are three technicians.
We will see. Huh…
02:07:31.477 --> 02:07:33.729
Beth is here...
02:07:34.480 --> 02:07:38.942
And in the museum we can expose
all the fossils we have, right?
02:07:38.942 --> 02:07:42.905
The visitor will enter the
sea, the marine fossils, then
02:07:42.905 --> 02:07:48.160
then, the tectonic movement that raised
the Serra and threw the sea there to Ceará,
02:07:48.202 --> 02:07:53.791
and then, the vegetation and the
fauna. The different epochs,
02:07:53.791 --> 02:07:57.461
when it was still the Atlantic
Forest, the Amazon Forest,
02:07:57.461 --> 02:08:00.172
and until the beginning
of the Caatinga.
02:08:00.589 --> 02:08:04.760
And we're going to show all those
gigantic animals that we have here.
02:08:04.760 --> 02:08:09.515
The giant sloth, the giant armadillo,
all these fossils will be exposed there.
02:08:10.307 --> 02:08:15.020
Oh, look over there, look. They
just started putting polycarbonate
02:08:15.020 --> 02:08:18.857
over there, upside.
Ah, it just started over there upside.
02:08:18.857 --> 02:08:22.069
Yes, this tiny piece here is already transparent.
After, you have to remove all the adhesive...
02:08:25.656 --> 02:08:31.161
So, it starts in the sea and finishes
in the Caatinga. Doesn't It, Miss Beth?
02:08:31.161 --> 02:08:31.286
Yes, it does.
02:08:31.286 --> 02:08:36.500
I think that if you could keep
the continuation from here,
02:08:36.500 --> 02:08:38.502
It would be completely different.
02:08:38.502 --> 02:08:41.839
So, the colours that we use, that I thought
of using was just because of this,
02:08:41.839 --> 02:08:45.759
to follow, but not like this, no…
Laboured, isn't it?
02:08:46.510 --> 02:08:50.639
One colour and other, isn't it?
Without being...
02:09:52.701 --> 02:09:56.330
Bonjour! Tout va bien?
02:09:56.997 --> 02:10:02.878
Good morning. Is everything alright there?
Is everything fine? Is everything working well?
02:10:04.671 --> 02:10:06.965
Good morning.
02:10:06.965 --> 02:10:08.960
Yes, yes, it is.
02:10:08.960 --> 02:10:10.960
Ok, alright so.
02:10:10.960 --> 02:10:12.960
Thank you.
02:10:12.960 --> 02:10:14.960
Good morning.
Distributor: Pragda Films
Length: 135 minutes
Date: 2018
Genre: Expository
Language: Portuguese
Grade: High School, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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