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Examples
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The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
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The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
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The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
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The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Next Philippine leader should raise tobacco tax 2010
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The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
-
The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
-
The Tasaday are a small group of indigenous people from the tropical rain forests of South Cotabato in Mindanao who allegedly lived a Stone Age life.
WN.com - Articles related to Cotabato LGU to review ban on open-pit mining 2010
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A case in point concerning the contemporary application of a "kinder, gentler" wild man may be witnessed in Bartra's reference to the great 1970s hoax concerning the Tasaday tribe of Mindanao, in The Philippines.
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Some may recall the breathless excitement generated by the esteemed journal National Geographic when its 1971 cover story of the "Stone Age" Tasaday hit the presses - and the subsequent red faces of all concerned when the "tribe" turned out to be some local villagers gallavanting in loin cloths.
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A case in point concerning the contemporary application of a "kinder, gentler" wild man may be witnessed in Bartra's reference to the great 1970s hoax concerning the Tasaday tribe of Mindanao, in The Philippines.
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