(CNN) – However, the glasses are not gold, say the refrain, as they demonstrated a new photo taken from the International Space Station (ISS). What appears to be the rhetoric of atraviesan Peru, specifically in the Amazon itself in the state of Madre de Dios, are high positions of prospection, probably given by Independent mines, according to NASA’s Earth Observatory, photo taken by one of his astronauts.
The poses are usually occult to the sight of the ISS, but are detached in this empty space at the reflection of the solar light.
The image shows the Inambari River and a series of rodent poses for deforested areas of captive outcrops.
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The Independent Gold Mine supports dozens of miles of people in the Madre de Dios region, which is located in one of the world’s largest non-registered mining industries, according to NASA.
The mine as well is the main impetus for deforestation in the region, and the mercury used to extract or contaminate the fluids, aggregates the agency.
The prospect of gold in the region has expanded since the inauguration of the Intercultural Survey Sur in 2011 hizo that the area will be more accessible.
The unique link between Brazil and Peru is destined to boost trade and tourism, but “deforestation can be the most important result of the block,” NASA said.
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The photo, posted on the principles of this month, was released on December 24th.
Madre de Dios is a pristine part of the Amazonas of the Tamaño de Carolina del Sur, prosperous guacamayos and monos, jaguars and mariposas. But some parts of Madre de Dios, like the Tambopata National Reserve, are protected by the mine, hundreds of square kilometers of tropical self in the area have been converted into a toxic and no-brainer.
The increases in the price of gold in the last few years have created cities in the eye of the beholder, which includes burdens emerging and peeling into tears, and that tens of thousands of people from all over Peru are united in the fever of modern gold.
In the year 2019, a scientific study found that the deforestation of the ore mine destroyed approximately 92,000 square kilometers of the Peruvian Amazon in 2018, according to the Monitoring Project group of the Andean Amazon, known as MAAP. This is a total annual registration since 1985, and it is a survey of the Centro de Innovación Científica Amazónica de la Universidad de Wake Forest.
The deforestation in 2018 eclipsed the previous record of 2017, when it was estimated that the gold mines of the valley had 911,000 de bosque, according to MAAP.
This means that in two years, the gold extraction will be the equivalent of more than 34,000 American football pitches from the Peruvian Amazon itself, according to the MAAP analysis.