Do you think there are still islands, places, cultures, civilisations that we haven't discovered?

Do you think there are still islands, places, cultures, civilisations that we haven't discovered?

dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-4373014/Rare-footage-captures-Sentinelese-tribe-Indian-Ocean.html

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sentinel_Island
nytimes.com/2017/09/10/world/americas/brazil-amazon-tribe-killings.html
youtube.com/watch?v=VeItzlkOuoo
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

>Do you think there are still islands, places, cultures, civilisations that we haven't discovered?

No.

No

Honestly no. And if such places do exist, then they are too small and too isolated to be of any importance.

That Sentinelese tribe could use some cultural enrichment and a good dose of immigration.

The simple answer is most likely no, however there is the exception of small civilizations of little importance regarding economy and culture. We have discovered them although we know little about them they show little to no interest in interacting with us and it would be better off for us to have minimal interaction with them in order not to damage their outlook of the world.

>there is probably some alien master race doing this to us as we speak :(

Not probably. Unlikely.

Although I doubt that there is any tribes we haven't discovered there are still a few tribes we know virtually nothing about.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sentinel_Island

>Three days after the earthquake, an Indian government helicopter observed several islanders, who shot arrows and threw stones at the hovering aircraft.

Can you imagine not knowing a single thing about the modern world and seeing a fucking helicopter flying overhead? I bet they tell stories to their children about how they bravely defended their island from the great metal beast.

No, dumbo.

came to post this

those can't see through trees that cover forests

They're doing us a massive favor

then explain how some autist found a tribe never before seen a few years ago in Brazil that satellites couldn't

nytimes.com/2017/09/10/world/americas/brazil-amazon-tribe-killings.html
youtube.com/watch?v=VeItzlkOuoo

>tribes
There are plenty of tribes in New Guinea and the Amazon about which virtually nothing is known. It's not that unlikely at all that there are a few small communities whose existence nobody belonging to our civilisation is aware of - there probably are.

You can expect them to live more or less like the tribes in that area who we are familiar with, though. Don't expect anything earth-shattering.

>cultures
See above.

>civilisations
See above, depends on how you define civilisation, but it'd be a pretty broad definition that counted e.g. a random undiscovered village in New Guinea as a new civilization.

>islands
We've mapped the whole surface of the Earth with satellite imagery, so of course not.

in 3030 we will discover an underwater rome

In 3030 we will discover an ancient underwater city and inadvertently awaken an ancient god that has been asleep for millennia.

>We've mapped the whole surface of the Earth with satellite imagery, so of course not.
supposedly.

There are known to be a number of uncontacted tribes in the jungles of South America and Oceania.

Other than that, humans really love exploring, and we have writing now, so most places have been explored and documented.

I'a i'a

they don't know what metal is, either

So who are we burying in 2030?

Small tribes, certainly, and certainly there are many dead civilizations we haven't excavated yet, but large groups of people who are unknown to the outside world, like Wakanda? No.
>Sentinel
Thee people have, of course, been "discovered". Some people ask why we don;t just land on their island and induct them into our civilization, the truth is there is virtually no prospect that such a course will end well for them, most would die from diseases after contact, the rest would be unable to adapt to the modern world and would end up as alcoholics on reservations.

Trump.

They actually cold smith metal tools from shit that washes up on shore and from a few shipwrecks. Alot of cultures did that before hot smithing, notably the Inuit of Greenland who used meteoric metal which is pretty cool.

Shoo shoo /x/fag

Yes. The one's that are underwater.

We have yet to find the lost city of zed

Actually they have salvaged metal from wrecked ships.

>The cargo ship MV Rusley ran aground on coastal reefs in mid-1977, and the MV Primrose did so in August 1981. The Sentinelese are known to have scavenged both wrecks for iron.