The ceremonial use of animal skins and bird feathers in Papua New Guinea threatened the indigenous wildlife, according to this article by Vincent Wager.
43 YEARS AGO
In the New Guinea highlands, wild animals are slaughtered for food and adornment. All the natives are decorated in extraordinary fashion: painted faces, feathers and quills through holes pierced in the nose and ears, necklaces of animal teeth, pigs’ tusks, hornbill heads, head-dresses of opossum fur, cassowary, lorikeet, parrot, bird of paradise feathers, bands of monitor or snake skin, a cravat and dangling tail of a tree kangaroo, a dagger of cassowary beak or carved leg bone. All the tribes in Papua New Guinea have the same habit of using wild creatures for decorations.
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