Information on our site comes from our personal research and in part from the followwing sources:

PUEBLO AWAJÚN Sistema de Coordenadas: Geográficas SERNANP

Two new species of wood lizards (Hoplocercinae: Enyalioides) from Cordillera de Colán in north-eastern Peru: Journal of Vertebrate Biology, 73(23074)

Traditional food system of an Awajun community in Peru: HILARY CREED-KANASHIRO . MARION ROCHE .IRMA TUESTA CERRÓN . HARRIET V. KUHNLEIN, PH.D.

Beings of a Feather: Learning About the Lives of Birds with Amazonian Peoples: Kevin Jernigan.

Defilement, moral purity, and transgressive power: The symbolism of filth in Aguaruna Jivaro culture: Priest, Robert Joseph.

Beetles, ants, wasps, or flies? An ethnobiological study of edible insects among the Awajún Amerindians in Amazonas, Peru: Rubén Casas Reátegui . Lukas Pawera , Pablo Pedro Villegas Panduro . Zbynek Polesny.

The importance of chemosensory clues in Aguaruna tree classification and identification: Kevin A Jernigan.

AN ETHNOBIOLOGICAL EXPLORATION OF SENSORY AND ECOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF TREE IDENTIFICATION AMONG THE AGUARUNA JÍVARO: KEVIN ARTHUR JERNIGAN.

Perú: Cerros de Kampankis: Nigel Pitman, Ernesto Ruelas Inzunza, Diana Alvira, Corine Vriesendorp, Debra K. Moskovits, Álvaro del Campo, Tatzyana Wachter, Douglas F. Stotz, Shapiom Noningo Sesén, Ermeto Tuesta Cerrón y/and Richard Chase Smith.

A Grammar of Aguaruna: Simon E. Overall.

MEDICINAL PLANTS OF THE ANDES AND THE AMAZON: Rainer W. Bussmann & Douglas Sharon.

Did ground sloths survive to Recent times in the Amazon region? David C. Oren.

Rendering 20th Centur Rendering 20th Century Peruvian F eruvian Folklore for a 21st Centur e for a 21st Century Reader: ES>EN Translation and Analysis of Peruvian Folktales and Mythology: Angela Walsh.

Translation and the Crónica del Perú:The Voices of Pedro Cieza de León: Roberto A. Valdeón.

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