Community | January 06, 2010 | 16 comments

In Peru's Amazon, finding gold but leaving mercury

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HowdyDo
On a sweltering day in Peru’s Amazon, Riquelme loads a bag of rocks onto his back, sticks a plastic hose in his mouth, and steps off the back of a makeshift barge into the chai-colored Tambopata River. He’ll spend the next two hours with his eyes closed, vacuuming up sediment from the river bottom.

On the barge, his partner Borian works the vacuum’s motor and sprays the mixture onto a rug. Once it dries, Borian puts it into a cylinder with mercury, then squirts it into a handkerchief in a crude separation process. Specks of gold – occasionally – emerge.

Welcome to an Amazon gold rush.

Skyrocketing gold prices have spurred hundreds of thousands of small-time entrepreneurs to spend day after day trolling through mud, hoping for that brilliant yellow fleck. For every “Buy Gold NOW” ad you’ve seen, there’s a peasant here who’s decided to go forty-niner. “We’ve been here for a few days, but we haven’t found any gold yet,” Borian smiles. But he’s optimistic. He can make more in days than most of his nonmining peers can make in a month.

But it takes about five grams of mercury to extract a gram of gold. That mercury is usually tossed overboard, poisoning one of the world’s most biodiverse rain forests. And Borian’s form of mining is among the most benign. Illegal cartels with heavy equipment clear-cut and mine huge areas of virgin forest, alarming environmental activists.

But patrolling the remote area is difficult. Just down the river from Borian and Riquelme, government environment officials sit in the shade. “There aren’t enough of us and we have very basic equipment,” says guard Harry Henderson Cooper, pointing to a dug-out canoe with a 5 horsepower engine. It’s no match for faster boats used by the illegal miners.

But the real problem, say most experts, is the local government, which is accused of being part of the illegal gold and timber cartels. “We are proposing the formalization of gold mining, so it can be managed sustainably, but the regional government doesn’t listen,” says Victor Zambrano, who heads a local conservation group. “The miners pool gold to pay off government officials. Everyone puts in a few grams.”

Environment minister Antonio Brack Egg pledges to fight corruption. “I have detailed information on all public officials involved in the corruption. We will take them out one by one,” he says. Mr. Egg and others say that the international community should create a process to certify “conflict-free” gold, as it has done with diamonds through the Kimberley Process.

Meanwhile, more illegal miners are flooding in. Says Egg: “When the price of gold goes up, the ministry of environment trembles.”
  1. groups:
    Community,   Green,   Peru (est. 1529)
  2. tags:
    Gold Peru Mercury
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16 comments // In Peru's Amazon, finding gold but leaving mercury

  • versasrev
    • 0
      versasrev  
    • I doubt that the miners are using a process that will limit their exposure to mercury. In the pursuit of gold the miners will clear timber, poison wildlife, and poison themselves. It's sad that these people don't realize that every gram of gold is slowly killing them, but at the same time it does feel a little bit like karma.

    • 2 years ago
  • UrbanGypsy
    • 0
      UrbanGypsy  
    • The gold rush in the Amazon is also a big deal in Brazil where mining is also booming. Sounds like South America is the place to be if you are looking for gold...

    • 2 years ago
  • jac1992
    • 0
      jac1992  
    • I say, if the governmet tampered with the stock market to make mercury more expensive than gold, the problem would be solved. The locals would then be collecting all the mercury thats in the river, instead of all the gold. Problem solved!

      (I really don't know why I am not king of the universe by now. I really don't)

    • 2 years ago
  • masterzip
  • jac1992
  • gizmoismeno
    • 0
      gizmoismeno  
    • what people want do for money, kill rain forest, start a war . o and cortez is the biggest pick of shit in all of history (in my book) he a prime example of what people what do for money. sorry Hernán Cortés one of those people in history that i just have to stop an be wow how low can person go.

    • 2 years ago
  • trut
  • nicsansone
  • Jessicats
  • spacemikey
    • 0
      spacemikey [removed]  
    • Image
    • Jessicats:

      I honestly don't know enough about Hernán Cortés, to suggest anything with regards to him. Here, you read about Hernán Cortés and tell me; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hern%C3%A1n_Cort%C3%A9s

      I know men have done all kinds of stupid shit (myself included) over women. Now who is truly at fault is up for debate.

      I know Helen of Troy, albeit indirectly, caused the launch of more war ships than any other woman in history.

      I am certain that of the majority of heterosexual men, women and what they want, is one of the main reasons guys do things.

      Oh and I know my rant made me sound like a sexist pig, whatever, it's over dramatization to accentuate my point.

    • 2 years ago
  • spacemikey
    • 0
      spacemikey [removed]  
    • It's all those damn violent women, I'm sorry I don't know to many men (that aren't pimps of wanna-bees) who could give a shit about gold or diamonds. Then again no self respecting man has got the balls to purpose to a woman without both. Why because they have been forced into the position to have to acquire such negative shit, or go without.

      In all honesty gold and diamonds are quite useful when used in technological applications, but used to fulfill some chicks child hood fantasy; they're a waste. And to think of all the ecological damage and the bloodshed over them, to tell someone you love them?

      WTF?

    • 2 years ago
  • Incredulous
  • AmericanStandard
    • 0
      AmericanStandard  
    • conflict free gold is just as absurd as conflict free diamonds. basically there is no difference between blood diamonds and conflict free diamonds as it is virtually impossible to tell where a diamond comes from. the problem would be even worse with gold given its ability to be smelted and formed.

    • 2 years ago
  • MoonLoon
  • masterzip
    • 0
      masterzip  
    • Mercury is still being washed down the Sacramento delta into the SF bay from the original gold rush of the 1850's,..has this had an impact on aquatic life???? well duh....look at how few salmon, sturgeon, trout and crabs are pulled out of the waters that are actually edible....

    • 2 years ago
  • derk
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