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They had also run out of animals to hunt. With no outside communications, they were completely isolated and struggled with a culture very different from their own. Despite numerous setbacks and hardships, they introduced the people to alternative food sources and worked with them to better manage and protect their environment.
With funding from the European Union and WaterAid, they were able to provide clean water and sanitation to fifty remote villages.
This had a huge impact on the health and welfare of more than ten thousand people across the Torricellis. This in turn has helped the Tenkile.
In the fourteen years since Jim and Jean arrived, their population has risen to more than three hundred. Healthy, well-fed people are far less likely to be driven to hunt. But the work is far from over.
Jim and Jean Thomas have taken a huge leap in pioneering how conservation is conducted in tribal areas. If they can get the support they need and it is successful, then this model could be used in South America, Africa and Oceania to stop further exploitation of natural resources. From their first effort to save one creature, they could potentially impact thousands more animal species and human lives.
Feature-length documentaries on Papua New Guinea are seldom made. The wild, remote locations and unpredictable climate and political circumstances present considerable challenges. So making a film like Into the Jungle provides a unique opportunity not only to profile the amazing work of Jim and Jean Thomas, but to get a rare insight into how life is for the people who live in the wilderness areas of this country. As a small NGO, non-government organisation Jim and Jean have already been very effective in helping and educating a group of villages comprising more than ten thousand people.
Their methods, so far very successful, have the potential to become a model for other communities and conservation programs. As Jim said to me, conservation is 10 per cent studying animals and 90 per cent working with people, because it is the people who ultimately create or destroy habitat.
How will they move forward without destroying their cultural heritage and the incredible biodiversity of the jungle they live in? People in Papua New Guinea have retained more of their original culture than most other tribal-based communities around the world. But in the last few decades the rate at which they have had to change and adapt to outside influences has been astounding.
The video featured an a cappella cover version of the track, with Anna Kendrick performing as lead vocalist. On 25 November , a copyright lawsuit was filed by Songs Music Publishing, LLC in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee against German automobile manufacturer Porsche and the Cramer-Krasselt advertising agency which alleged that one of the company's advertisements for the sports car Porsche Cayman "copies several quantitatively and qualitatively important portions of 'Jungle ' ".
According to the complaint, the defendants copied the original drum rhythms, organ stabs and background vocals from the song, which together "negates any suggestion of independent creation".
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Retrieved 6 September Retrieved 7 September Don't Tread on This Edition". Retrieved 12 September Out of the 'Jungle' and into Chapel Hill".
"Jungle" is a song by American rock band X Ambassadors and British blues rock singer Jamie X Ambassadors and Jamie N Commons included the song on the setlist for their Into the Jungle U.S. Tour, which lasted from 30 September to Directed by Justin D'Agostino. In I traveled from the United States to the island of Borneo for a six month adventure doing anthropological research.
Ambassadors rock the State". Retrieved 13 September Retrieved 5 September Jay Z jumps on "Jungle" remix". Music Copyright Infringement Resource.
Recording Industry Association of America. Albums discography Singles discography Videography. Retrieved from " https: