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North Sentinel Island lies to the west of the other Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal.
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It is a small island with an area of only about 23 square miles (59.7 sq. km.).
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It is mostly covered by a forest that gives way to a narrow beach that encircles the island.
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The island is also surrounded by coral reefs and dark blue water rich with fish and other
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sea life.
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What makes North Sentinel Island different from other tropical islands is its unusual
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inhabitants, who we will discuss in this episode of The Infographics Show, “The Untouched
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Tribe – North Sentinel Island.”
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Walking around naked except for some leaves, string fibers, and other decorations, the
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indigenous people of North Sentinel Island, the Sentinelese, have lived in almost complete
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isolation from the rest of the world for nearly 60,000 years.
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According to a documentary about North Sentinel Island, they are “thought to be direct descendants
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of the first humans who emerged from Africa.”
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They have been isolated for so long that the language they speak has been forgotten by
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the rest of the world.
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Another concern is that their extreme isolation has made them vulnerable to modern-day diseases.
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They do not have immunity to them and could become seriously ill or even die as a result
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of being exposed to them.
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Although modern civilization is only about 31 miles (50 km) away at the city of Port
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Blair, the Sentinelese lag far behind modern times.
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They do not even know how to make fire.
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The only time that they have fire is when it is “produced spontaneously” according
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to one article, such as when lightning strikes a tree.
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The Sentinelese have no knowledge of agriculture.
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They live off the land and the sea, hunting, fishing, and collecting wild plants.
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They also eat coconuts that wash up on the shore.
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They use simple tools such as harpoons, flatbows, and arrows not only to hunt for food but also
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to safeguard their isolation.
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The Sentinelese isolate themselves by choice.
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They have a long history of using violence to drive outsiders away from their island
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home.
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Over the years, nearly everyone who has ventured too close to or landed on North Sentinel Island
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has been attacked and/or killed by the Sentinelese.
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Most of them suffered these negative outcomes whether their visits to the island were accidental
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or intentional.
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For instance, in 1896, one unlucky Indian convict survived a dangerous prison escape
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from Port Blair only to be killed by the Sentinelese shortly after landing on their beach.
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According to one source, a British party recovered his body and found that the convict was “pierced
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in several places by arrows and his throat was cut.”
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In 1974, a team of anthropologists trying to film a documentary, a National Geographic
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photographer, and some police officers were greeted by a shower of arrows from the Sentinelese.
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One of the arrows hit the director of the documentary in the left thigh.
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In 1981, crew members of the cargo ship MV Primrose were attacked by the Sentinelese
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after their ship became stranded on the reef surrounding the island.
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They had to fight the Sentinelese with “flare guns, axes and lengths of pipe” in order
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to live long enough to be rescued a week later.
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The only friendly encounter outsiders had with the Sentinelese occurred in January 1991
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when an Indian contact expedition visited the island.
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There is some video footage of members of the expedition presenting the Sentinelese
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with gifts of coconuts thrown into the water, which the tribespeople quickly gathered.
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There is also video footage showing some smiling Sentinelese interacting with members of the
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expedition and even touching them out of curiosity.
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Unfortunately, this one encounter turned out to be more like a truce rather than an end
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to the isolated tribe's war with outsiders.
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Later visits to the island were met with the usual hostile greetings of weapons drawn or
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arrows fired.
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The last encounter occurred in 2006.
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Two fishermen drifted too close to the island, and the Sentinelese killed them and buried
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them in shallow graves.
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Authorities attempted to recover the bodies of the fishermen but were unsuccessful because
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of what one source calls a “customary hail of arrows.”
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They ended up leaving the bodies there and leaving the Sentinelese to live in peace.
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Like the other Andaman Islands, North Sentinel Island is under the jurisdiction of the Indian
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government.
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Over the years, India has allowed the Sentinelese to manage their own affairs with minimal government
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intrusion.
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In 1991, it placed a 3 mile (5 km) exclusion zone around North Sentinel Island to keep
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outsiders such as tourists and poachers away from it.
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Will more outsiders become target practice for the Sentinelese?
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Will these isolated tribespeople, whose estimated population ranges from 15 to 500, be wiped
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out because tourists will expose them to diseases that they have no immunity to?
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Only time will tell.
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If someone gave you a free trip to North Sentinel Island, would you go there?
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Why or why not?
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Let us know in the comments!
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Also, be sure to check out our other video called What If Animals Went To World War With
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Humans?!
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!