Two women fight to save camp coorong and ancient craft work in a remote site
The camp was found in July when a team of men stumbled upon the remains of an ancient stone monument.
The team returned to the site with a camera to see what they came across but after four months, no further artifacts had been discovered.
The remains and the tools were also so poorly intact that the men’s skills as diggers, stone-makers and tool makers are unknown, according to the team’s coorongo, a local group of tribes who were once one of the largest tribes in the region, now numbering only about three thousand.
Th카지노 사이트e discovery of the camp’s site comes at a time of increasing poaching of stones, tools and other antiquities in remote areas, as it’s difficult to find them and the materials for them – which are also더킹카지노 notoriously scarce – are being used in illegal or illegal activities.
But although the two teams have already met with police, the tribes still fear losing their claim to ancient stone, according tapronxo reports.
The team said the locals are “disappointed” by the loss of the camp, but says they will continue to conduct fieldwork, using technology, until the artefacts are found.
“We are not giving up. We just need help from the community and the government to make the discovery and return the stone artefacts we found,” the team said.
The local team has so far returned three items, a stone bowl with the remains of a bowl, a bowl with a stone bowl, and a second stone bowl with an unknown stone.