The MINE of SERRA PELADA
THE MAN WHO WAS NEAREST TO CREATING HELL ON EARTH
According to the legend, everything started in January 1979. 430 kilometres south of the Amazon River's mouth in Brazil, Serra Pelada was both a little hamlet and a massive gold mine. A local youngster discovered a tiny, six-gram gold token buried in a river in the late 1970s.
That find quickly rose to the status of one of the most infamous, brutal, and violent open-air gold mining digs in human history. A few weeks after the young guy came into contact with the artefact, rumours began to circulate that gold was located in a remote spot beside a lake in Pará, Brazil, and that the location wouldavailable for public mining. There was no turning back after that.
Tens of thousands of prospective prospectors descended on the region a week later in an effort to profit from the discovery and provide for their families. They travelled from all across Brazil in search of employment in the mine. Workers with a contract paying between $2 and $3 per day had to climb hundreds of metres of ladders and ropes to get to the starting point of the hand-digging plots.
They were forced to carry bags weighing up to 100 kilos of sediment and earth up half-collapsed walls while drenched in perspiration and covered in mud in a true bottomless abyss.At first, the only way to get to this remote area was by plane or on foot. Miners typically paid exorbitant prices for taxis to take them from the nearest town to the end of a dirt road. From there, they had to walk the remaining distance, almost 20 kilometers to the site.
And yes, huge gold nuggets were discovered early on, with the largest weighing almost 7 kilograms, about $100,000 at the market price of the early 1980s. Of course, the mine was also known for its terrible conditions and violence, and the city that grew up next to it became infamous for the murder and doom of its inhabitants.
In fact, not all who ventured into the mine found their way back, and those who did risk having both their wealth and their lives taken from them due to the chaos and murder that had engulfed the rural town.
The famous Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado traveled to the Serra Pelada mines when he found out what was happening there. Salgado took some of the most disturbing and shocking images that are remembered, with the workers crowded together, on the verge of madness and chaos in search of gold that very few could find. When he arrived in the area, the photographer told the media:
"All my hair stood on end. The pyramids, the history of humanity that we had managed to unfold. I had traveled to many places, none like this. Swept by the winds that carried the hint of fortune, men came to the gold mine . No one was taken by force, but once they arrived, everyone became a slave to the dream of gold and the need to stay alive. Once inside, it became impossible to leave."
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