Tsimané
Total population
16,958[1]
Regions with significant populations
Bolivia ( Beni)
Languages
Tsimané, Spanish[2]
Religion
Traditional tribal religion[2]
Related ethnic groups
Mosetén[3]
Photo taken in 1913 during Erland Nordenskiöld's expedition in Bolivia

The Tsimané, also known as the Tsimane' or Chimane, are an indigenous people of lowland Bolivia, living chiefly in the Beni Department municipalities of San Borja, San Ignacio de Moxos, Rurrenabaque, and Santa Ana del Yacuma.[4] The Tsimané are the main residents of the T'simane Council Territory (Spanish: Territorio del Consejo T'simane) and the Pilón Lajas Reserve. They are primarily a subsistence agriculture culture, although hunting and fishing contribute significantly to many of the settlements' food supply.[citation needed] Those Tsimané living in the Reserve are affiliated with the multiethnic Consejo Regional Tsimane Moseten (CRTM), which holds the title to the Reserve as a Native Community Land or TCO.[5]

Name

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The Tsimané are also known as the Achumano, Chamano, Chimane, Chimanis, Chimanisa, Chimnisin, Chumano, Nawazi-Moñtji, and Ramano people.[3]

Language

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The Tsimané have their own language Tsimané, also called Mosetan, which is a language isolate having several dialect varieties, such as the Mosetén of Santa Ana and the Mosetén of Covendo which are mutually intelligible.[6]

Subsistence

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They live in small communities composed of 20 to 30 families. Tsimané and Mosetén people depend mainly on subsistence farming, they cultivate bananas and manioc through swidden agriculture, although hunting, fishing and gathering contribute significantly as a source of food for almost all communities.[7] The population has been undergoing some degree of market integration over the past 15 years, and some Tsimane now participate in the cash economy.[2]

Health

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Both the Tsimane' Amazonian Panel Study[8] and The Tsimane Health and Life History Project have studied the Tsimane since 2002.[9] Among other things, it appears that they do not develop heart disease as they age in the same ways as people in the developed world.[10][11] Blood tissue from the Tsimané exhibits a slower intrinsic epigenetic aging rate than that of other populations according to a biomarker of tissue age known as epigenetic clock.[12] This finding might explain the "Tsimane inflammation paradox", wherein high levels of inflammation and infection, and low HDL cholesterol levels, are not associated with accelerated cardiovascular aging.[10][13]

Tsimané sleep patterns have been studied as an example of "natural" sleep in nonindustrial or preindustrial societies, and to assess relationships between sleep patterns and health. Factors observed include sleep duration, timing, natural light, ambient temperature and seasonality. A normal daily pattern for a Tsimané group is to work during the day, congregate around a fire while cooking food, share a meal, then remain by the fire as it gets dark, sharing stories and information. Children and mothers tend to move away to sleep before male adults, with sleep onset occurring, on average, 3.3 hours after sunset. From beginning to end, sleep periods averaged 6.9–8.5 hours, with actual time slept of 5.7–7.1 hours, less sleep than reported in many industrial societies.[14][15]

The average Tsimané woman has nine children in her lifetime. A study of 983 Tsimané women found that 70% were infected with the parasitic roundworm Ascaris lumbricoides, which is believed to have increased their fertility rate by suppressing their immune system, leading to two additional children over the course of a lifetime.[16]

Notes

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  1. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2012 Bolivia Características de la Población". Instituto Nacional de Estadística, República de Bolivia. p. 29. Archived from the original on 2021-08-01. Retrieved 2020-03-28.
  2. ^ a b c "Tsimané." Ethnologue. Retrieved 22 Feb 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Chimane." Countries and Their Cultures. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  4. ^ Fundación UNIR (2009). Las identidades en las grandes regiones de Bolivia, Fascículo Nº2. La Paz, Bolivia: Fundación UNIR. pp. 19–20.
  5. ^ Costas Monje, Patricia (January 1, 2001). "La pluriterritorialidad en el Norte de La Paz. Dos casos de estudio sobre defensa del territorio". In Chumacero, Juan (ed.). Reconfigurando territorios: Reforma agraria, control territorial y gobiernos indígenas en Bolivia. La Paz, Bolivia: Fundación Tierra. pp. 143–44.
  6. ^ Sakel, Jeanette A grammar of Mosetén, Mouton de Gruyter 2004.This study regards the language as spoken by some 800 people in the foothills and adjoining lowland area of the Bolivian Andes
  7. ^ Bottazzi, Patrick (2014) Une écologie politique des territoires tsimane' d'Amazonie bolivienne : notre grande maison. Institut des hautes études internationales et du développement, Genève (Suisse); Karthala, Paris.
  8. ^ "The Tsimane' Amazonian Panel Study".
  9. ^ "The UNM-UCSB Tsimane Health and Life History Project". Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  10. ^ a b Gurven, Michael; Hillard Kaplan; Jeffrey Winking; Daniel Eid Rodriguez; Sarinnapha Vasunilashorn; Jung Ki Kim; Caleb Finch; Eileen Crimmins; Henry Harpending (2009). "Inflammation and Infection Do Not Promote Arterial Aging and Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors among Lean Horticulturalists". PLOS ONE. 4 (8) e6590. Bibcode:2009PLoSO...4.6590G. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0006590. PMC 2722089. PMID 19668697. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  11. ^ "Age Doesn't Mean Heart Disease For Bolivian Tribe". Talk of the Nation. NPR. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  12. ^ Horvath S, Gurven M, Levine ME, Trumble BC, Kaplan H, Allayee H, Ritz BR, Chen B, Lu AT, Rickabaugh TM, Jamieson BD, Sun D, Li S, Chen W, Quintana-Murci L, Fagny M, Kobor MS, Tsao PS, Reiner AP, Edlefsen KL, Absher D, Assimes TL (2016). "An epigenetic clock analysis of race/ethnicity, sex, and coronary heart disease". Genome Biol. 17 (1): 171. doi:10.1186/s13059-016-1030-0. PMC 4980791. PMID 27511193.
  13. ^ Alejandro Millán, 'Deep in the Amazon rainforest lives a community whose hearts age more slowly BBC News 17 August 2024
  14. ^ Preston, Elizabeth (28 April 2022). "The awake ape: Why people sleep less than their primate relatives". Knowable Magazine. Annual Reviews. doi:10.1146/knowable-042822-1. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  15. ^ Yetish, Gandhi; Kaplan, Hillard; Gurven, Michael; Wood, Brian; Pontzer, Herman; Manger, Paul R.; Wilson, Charles; McGregor, Ronald; Siegel, Jerome M. (November 2015). "Natural Sleep and Its Seasonal Variations in Three Pre-industrial Societies". Current Biology. 25 (21): 2862–2868. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2015.09.046. PMC 4720388. PMID 26480842.
  16. ^ Gallagher, James (20 November 2015). "Parasitic worm 'increases' women's fertility'". BBC News. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Mosetén–Chimane language

Chimané (Tsimaneʼ) and Mosetén are dialects of a South American language isolate. Mosetén is further divided into Mosetén of Santa Ana and Mosetén of Covendo

Fatima Airport

are no roads into Fatima. The Fatima Mission tends to the needs of the Tsimane, an isolated tribe of Bolivian Amerindians in the eastern Andes foothills

Psychology of music preference

exposure to Western culture. The group of participants from Santa Maria, the Tsimane, were of specific interest due to the substantial differences between their

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including the Tacanan-speaking Tacana and Ese Ejja, the closely related Tsimané and Mosetén, and the voluntarily isolated Toromona. Ecolodges are found

Language isolate

February 2021. Sakel, Jeanette. "Tomo I: Ámbito andino – Mosetén y Chimane (Tsimane')". Lenguas de Bolivia. Centre for Language Studies-Radboud University

Antisuyu

varied ethnic groups living in the Antisuyu such as the Asháninka or the Tsimané. Antisuyu is the second smallest of the suyus. It was located northeast

Nations and IQ

to use Western IQ tests across diverse cultural settings. Work with the Tsimane and with children in Mali, for instance, has demonstrated that low scores

Uru–Chipaya languages

similarities with the Kunza, Pukina, Pano, Jaqi, Kechua, Mapudungun, and Moseten-Tsimane language families due to contact. Aguiló, F. (1986). El idioma de los Urus