The Hadzabe people are an indigenous ethnic group living around Lake Eyasi, in the southern part of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area. There are estimated to only be around 1000 Hadzabe people living in Tanzania. This ethnic tribe are descendants of Tanzania’s aboriginal hunter gatherer populations, and still to this day rely on the land and their surroundings for survival. They hunt using bows and arrows, typically hunting baboons and other primates around. As well as the wild meat, the Hadzabe also survive on roots and tubers, and natural honey found in trees. They have their own method of harvesting honey, using a variety of mushroom called a ‘puff ball’ mushroom which when burnt lets off a smoke that has sedative effect on the bees. Tanzania, 2019
As descendants of Tanzania's aboriginal hunter-gatherer population, the Hadzabe have probably occupied their current territory for thousands of years, with relatively little modification to their basic way of life until the past hundred years
Portrait of a Datoga woman. Lake Eyasi, Tanzania, 2019