StMU Research Scholars

Featuring Scholarly Research, Writing, and Media at St. Mary’s University

October 30, 2020

The Modern Gold Rush: Death by Greed

We often fail to question why we romanticize certain valuable items so prevalent in many societies over time. Some of the most common examples of valued items include gems like diamonds, but an even more ubiquitous case by far can be made for how glamorized gold has remained over time. For centuries, scientists sought to master alchemy in order to turn dust into gold. The American Gold Rush brought people to California from around the world. The stories of Cevola/Cibola, the Lost City of Gold, factor historically to help explain the attraction to Gold. Gold stands at the center of cultures through multiple books and movies like National Treasure and even Dora and The Lost City of Gold. As such, the road to finding gold still appeals to many despite the horrendous history surrounding both gold and how to mine it or search for it. The pursuit of Cevola by the conquistadors lead to a multitude of indigenous civilizations and tribes being absolutely destroyed while the American Gold Rush led to massacres and the displacement of large groups of indigenous people. While one might like to think that these accounts of death and displacement belong solely in the past, justifying today’s continued idealization of gold’s value, I regret to inform you that modern gold rushes, much like the ones of the past, continue to decimate indigenous tribes and ravage the environment. The two largest regions where gold is exploited are on the Africa continent and in South America. Deforestation is held as having the most devastating environmental impact in South American, leading environmental groups to focus their battles against logging and deforestation in the Amazon Basin which obfuscates the damage done by gold mining in the area when in fact the two practices are often closely related.1 While logging and deforestation remain at the forefront of environmental activism, illegal mining produces dangerous and lethal environmental consequences threatening the health and rights for indigenous populations. 

Amazonian illegal mining operations tend to be smaller in scale to avoid detection. They often use mercury because it amalgams with gold specs and ore providing an infallible process to maximize returns. However, mercury is a highly toxic chemical. The issue is since it is an illegal operation, the people doing this follow no regulations, nor any apparent moral compass. They improperly use and dispose of the mercury, carelessly causing environmental degradation. The Nahua tribe fell victim to mercury poisoning in the past few years. The Nahua located in the Peruvian Amazon experienced a surge of mercury-related diseases that were fatal to some of the population.2 The source of contamination came through their drinking water although the origin or point of entry of contamination with mercury was never discovered according to Peruvian reports.3 However, these reports were heavily criticized for not reaching a substantial conclusion as to what the real cause of the mercury pollution was. It theorized that the source of the mercury is a result of gas mining or illegal gold mining since there were instances of illegal mining in the vicinity of the Nahua’s water source. Although the mercury contamination does not last long in running water sources and can be normally dealt with filtration, in the case of indigenous groups like the Nahua, they do not have the ability to wait for the mercury to pass through let alone the ability to filter it as they depend on the running water from the rivers and the sources but do not store water reserves. In a hypothetical instance where the Nahua could have waited out the mercury contamination for this singular occurrence, it is likely that a recurrence of this contamination would happen again given the high amount of mercury that is used in the Amazon.4 

Artisanal and small-scale mining, which is often illegal, uses high amounts of mercury in their operations. It estimated that in the Amazon forest, anywhere from 275 tonnes up to 1000 tonnes of mercury are used and released in the water per year by these smaller mining operations.5 The issue then becomes more prevalent when this amount of mercury gets into the water and the sediment causing adverse effects on the flora, fauna like fish, and people who rely on those sources of food and water for their survival.6 Mercury pollution threatens the well being of thousands of indigenous people. Various tribes live on reservations, much like the ones in the U.S., and these reservations are meant to be protected. The presence of mercury contamination from illegal mining subverts the environment and bypasses those protections. Mining alone has detrimental effects on the communities and tribes across the Amazon. However, in the case of the Nahua and others like them, illegal mining had devastating effects. The most adverse impact of illegal mining comes from mercury whose lingering byproduct affects indigenous people like the Nahua overtime.

Deforestation in the Western Amazon region of Brazil. Credit Carl De Souza/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Beyond mercury contamination, indigenous tribes face multiple kinds of violations of their rights on their reservations. Illegal mining combines multiple factors like drug lords and cartels getting involved in the Amazon’s illegal mining scene in recent years, the number of illegal mines has increased and subsequently, competition and tactics used have become more brutal.7 Often, indigenous people are often forcibly displaced from their land to start mining the precious metal. But even when governments open mines, like in the case of the Ecuadorian government, they reserve the right to forcibly relocate indigenous people at will.8 Indigenous people can be forced into slavery to work in the mines where they once lived. An instance of this can be seen with the Yanomami tribe in Venezuela where indigenous workers had slave numbers tattooed on their bodies.9 Legal and illegal mining alike have increased violations of various clauses in both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Declaration on The Rights of Indigenous Peoples.1011 Illegal activities come with many patterns that include other human rights violations with sexual exploitation and slave trafficking of non-indigenous people. When added to the environmental issues discussed above the ravages to the local community are impossible to withstand. And whether illegal mining or logging often deemed “legal”, both practices take advantage of the infrastructure like roads needed to facilitate transportation. Therefore, logging often starts where roads are left behind making access easier for logging where mining was once done which adds to the damage of previous environmental degradation.

In front of this growing number of human rights and indigenous rights violations covered by the media, well researched by various non-profit institutes, one would think that governments are taking actions to stop these illegal acts… right? Well yes, but really no. At least in Peru, indigenous groups began to sue the government over their actions. They won some cases and some changes were made. Yet the Peruvian Government did not choose to stop their actions of their own volition.12 But in other places, like Brazil, the road to solving the threat of illegal mining has taken some strange turns. Brazil does not have a record of good environmental policies. Furthermore, Brazilian authorities rarely enforce existing environmental policies either.13

Forests can be sacrificed for commercial use for companies like Walmart. | Courtesy of change.org (https://www.change.org/p/casey-cummings-help-stop-the-deforestation-of-the-pine-rocklands-for-commercial-use-keep-it-preserved-not-endangered)

So originally Bolsinaro, the President of Brazil, elected in 2018, had decided to start repealing the few existing environmental regulations that protected the Amazon in order to free up the logging and mining industries.14 But unexpectedly, Bolsonaro’s government proceeded to crackdown on both industries, logging and mining, due to international pressure which meant going against his electoral promises to deregulate these industries, this led miners to protest his environmental crackdown.15 Bolsonaro’s goal in doing this was to appeal to the international audience and in order to do that he began to focus on illegal activity, looked deeper into the causes of forest fires, and pulled back on the leeway given to commercial mining and logging industries which could be better regulated to protect the rights of indigenous people. Yet to no avail, Bolsonaro proceeded to double-back again. Since then Bolsonaro plans to further open the Amazon for commercial mining on indigenous land.1617 Brazil makes one believe that it intends to protect indigenous lives and rights by on the one hand cracking down on illegal, non-government-sanctioned mining activities, while on the other hand, favoring “legal” mining that further violates indigenous rights even more blatantly. At least in the case of Brazil, it should be recognized that commercial mining is, at large, not using mercury and not killing off or enslaving indigenous groups, but are nevertheless violating indigenous rights through displacement and endangering ecosystems.18

So at the end of the day what we do about these issues? Well, expecting governments to take action is one thing, voting people into office who will protect the Amazon and indigenous people would be a good start for these countries, so any advocacy work to that goal can help. Aside from that, there is little one can do to stop illegal mining, short of becoming an officer in one of the Amazonian nations or participating in boycotts that target gold from these nations. More feasibly, what one can do in order to be effective is by spreading information regarding these issues, and supporting organizations like the ones who helped the Nahua and those like the International Development Research Centre which have helped indigenous people in the past and support research regarding mercury poisoning of indigenous groups.19

This picture symbolizes the effects of deforestation on our lungs. | Courtesy of Vocal (https://vocal.media/futurism/deforestation-causes-effects-and-solutions)
  1. Zoe Sullivan, “Mining Activity Causing Nearly 10 Percent of Amazon Deforestation,” November 2, 2017, https://news.mongabay.com/2017/11/mining-activity-causing-nearly-10-percent-of-amazon-deforestation/.
  2. David Hill, “Remote Amazon Tribe Hit by Mercury Crisis, Leaked Report Says,” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, January 24, 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/andes-to-the-amazon/2018/jan/24/amazon-tribe-mercury-crisis-leaked-report.
  3. David Hill, “Remote Amazon Tribe Hit by Mercury Crisis, Leaked Report Says,” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, January 24, 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/andes-to-the-amazon/2018/jan/24/amazon-tribe-mercury-crisis-leaked-report.
  4. David Hill, “Remote Amazon Tribe Hit by Mercury Crisis, Leaked Report Says,” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, January 24, 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/andes-to-the-amazon/2018/jan/24/amazon-tribe-mercury-crisis-leaked-report.
  5. Louisa J. Esdaile, and Justin M. Chalker, “The Mercury Problem in Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining,” May 11, 2018, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5969110/.
  6. Olaf Malm, “Gold Mining as a Source of Mercury Exposure in the Brazilian Amazon,” PDF file, January 6, 1998, http://mddconsortium.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Malm_1998-READ.pdf.
  7. Jay Weaver, Nicholas Nehamas, and Kyra Gurney, “How Drug Lords Make Billions Smuggling Gold to Miami for Your Jewelry and Phones,” Miamiherald, Miami Herald, https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article194187699.html.
  8. Livia Wagner, “Organized Crime and Illegally Mined Gold in Latin America,” PDF file, The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, April 2016, https://globalinitiative.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Organized-Crime-and-Illegally-Mined-Gold-in-Latin-America.pdf.
  9. Sam Jones, “Illegal Gold Mining Drives Human Rights Abuses in Latin America, Claims Study,” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, April 7, 2016, https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/apr/07/illegal-gold-mining-drives-human-rights-abuses-in-latin-america-claims-giatoc-study.
  10. United Nations, “Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” 1948.
  11. The United Nations General Assembly, “Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People,” 2007.
  12. Maria Cervantes, “Indigenous Groups in Peru Are Suing Government over Oil, Mining Plans – and Winning,” June 27, 2019, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-peru-indigenous/indigenous-groups-in-peru-are-suing-government-over-oil-mining-plans-and-winning-idUSKCN1TS240.
  13. Chris Arsenault, “Brazil, Home of Amazon, Rolls Back Environmental Protection,” May 15, 2017, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-politics-environment/brazil-home-of-amazon-rolls-back-environmental-protection-idUSKCN18B21P.
  14. Letícia Casado, and Ernesto Londoño, “Under Brazil’s Far-Right Leader, Amazon Protections Slashed and Forests Fall,” The New York Times, The New York Times, July 28, 2019, https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/28/world/americas/brazil-deforestation-amazon-bolsonaro.html.
  15. Marina Lopes, “Illegal Miners, Feeling Betrayed, Call on Bolsonaro to End Environmental Crackdown in Amazon,” The Washington Post, WP Company, September 10, 2019, https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/feeling-betrayed-brazils-wildcat-miners-call-on-bolsonaro-to-end-environmental-crackdown-in-amazon/2019/09/10/01a6a5f8-d3d2-11e9-8924-1db7dac797fb_story.html.
  16. Reuters in Brasília, “Brazil’s Bolsonaro Unveils Bill to Allow Commercial Mining on Indigenous Land,” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, February 6, 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/06/brazil-bolsonaro-commercial-mining-indigenous-land-bill.
  17. Maria Canineu, and Andrea Carvalho, “Bolsonaro’s Plan to Legalize Crimes Against Indigenous Peoples,” Human Rights Watch, September 4, 2020, https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/03/01/bolsonaros-plan-legalize-crimes-against-indigenous-peoples.
  18. Patricia Quijano Vallejos, Peter Veit, Pedro Tipula, and Katie Reytar, “Undermining Rights: Indigenous Lands and Mining in the Amazon,” World Resources Institute, October 19, 2020, https://www.wri.org/publication/undermining-rights.
  19. Maureen Johnson, “Mercury Contamination in the Amazon,” PDF File, International Development Research Centre, April 2003, https://www.idrc.ca/sites/default/files/sp/Documents%20EN/mercury-contamination-in-the-amazon.pdf.

Tags from the story

Amazon

Brazil

Civil Rights

deforestation

gold mining

Human Rights Violations

mercury

Recent Comments

Aqsa Khan

This article was very well-written and really highlights how greed can take over people. I had no clue that something like this was taking place. It’s crazy how greedy humans can be when it comes to materialistic objects such as gold. People are committing illegal acts and putting their health in danger by entering these mines just to find some gold.

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15/11/2020

1:17 am

Kayla Sultemeier

I found this article fascinating! I am glad that you outlined the intense nature that we place on capitalism here in the United States. It is heartbreaking what others will do to fill their pockets, especially at the expense of others. The tribal population and the environment seem to only be collateral damage here. I believe that it was an important note to mention the Universal Human Rights Declaration because it truly confronts the ethical violation at hand.

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15/11/2020

1:17 am

Emmett Pena

This is the type of news that needs to be more mainstream to the media. The effects of deforestation have a horrible effect on our planet and the worst part is that it is preventable but nothing is happening to stop it. The exploitation of the Amazon rainforest will lead to the demise of not only the animals, but of the economy as well. These gold rushes need to come to an end in order for our environment to be as safe and secure as possible.

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15/11/2020

1:17 am

Genesis Vera

This article did a great job of illustrating the gold rush and the negative impact it has on people. I didn’t have much knowledge of this before reading the article but I did figure that the gold rush has some bad connotations attached to it. I think this was a very well written article that did a good job mixing ethics with the economy.

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25/11/2020

1:17 am

Camila Garcia

The article was very informative, before I read it I did not know about the negative effects the gold rush had. I thought it was well written because each paragraph follows a specific issue and it explores different countries and creates the notion that the gold rush was harmful to the indigenous populations everywhere and not in one country. I feel as if the gold rush and the scramble for Africa both had very similar effects.

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28/01/2021

1:17 am

Grace Frey

Thank you for writing an article that sheds light on an issue that I was not aware of up until now. I had known about the romanticizing of the Gold Rush, but I was not aware of how indigenous people continue to suffer today as a result of the hunt for gold. I am grateful that organizations exist like the International Development Research group that work to protect indigenous people from being taken advantage of. It is scary how easily minority populations can be abused in nations that are in development, like some states in Africa and South America.

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28/01/2021

1:17 am

Azariel Del Carmen

I knew this has been a main issue for quite some time and how illegal activities of these things exist because people are trying to make a living to live on which is sad to hear that many of these things to benefit someone hurts even though this living is just for drug cartels more than anything and such. It’s sad to also hear there isn’t much government action to this though sadly in this world the government just cares to make profit 1st and protect resource 2nd. Yes you can pressure but after that dies down, it’s back up again with them or a future person. Really all we can do is just try to push a message to corporates but that won’t do much in this society.

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31/01/2021

1:17 am

Haley Ticas

This article effectively sheds light on the harmful and impactful effects of gold mining especially to the indigenous population and amazon. I really enjoyed this article as it provided the readers and I further information on a subject I knew little about. I’m glad to hear the organizations such as the International Development Research are working towards protecting and helping indigenous people.

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02/02/2021

1:17 am

Hailey Lechuga

This article was really well written! It’s disheartening to learn about the impact of illegal practices in the amazon. Most notably, the fact that illegal mining can have several serious influences on indigenous people. Not only are the issues of illegal mining, logging, and deforestation changing the lives of these people, but they are also introduced to slavery and sexual exploitation. It is wrong to disturb the land for monetary incentives and people need to realize that we must do better to protect the planet that gives us life.

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21/02/2021

1:17 am

Eric Hernandez

This article was very interesting. I’ve heard of gold rushes and even knew how they caused a lot of chaos but after reading into this article, I now see deeper into how it is even worse than I thought. I think it’s cruel how people idolize material things such as gold and are willing to do anything, including hurting others lives, just to get to it.

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21/02/2021

1:17 am

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