| Pitinga River Rio Pitinga (Portuguese) | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
| Country | Brazil |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | |
| • location | Amazonas state |
| Mouth | |
• location | Balbina Dam |
• coordinates | 1°06′35″S 59°36′20″W / 1.109841°S 59.605659°W / -1.109841; -59.605659 |
| Basin features | |
| River system | Uatumã River |
The Pitinga River (Portuguese: Rio Pitinga) is a river of Amazonas state in north-western Brazil. It empties into the Balbina Dam on the Uatumã River.
Mining operation
In the 1970s the vast Amazon rainforest was being mapped through the Amazon Radar Project, a large-scale effort to chart remote landscapes. Among its most significant findings was the detection of cassiterite (tin ore) located near the Waimiri Atroari Indigenous Reservation.1
By 1979, geologists from Mineração Taboca, then a subsidiary of the Paranapanema heavy civil construction company, found traces of cassiterite in 1979 in tributaries of the Pitinga River.2
What began as small-scale exploration quickly expanded into an industrial-scale project, reshaping the region’s social and environmental landscape. The Pitinga mine began operations in 1982.2 The company built a community in the Amazon forest 300 kilometres (190 mi) from Manaus with housing, schools, health facilities, power and telecommunications.2 In 1985 Paranapanema invested US$15 million in infrastructure upgrades, including a 10,000 kilowatt hydroelectric power plant on the Pitinga River, expected to reduce energy costs by US$4 million annually.3
References
References
Sources
Sources
- Smale-Adams, K. B. (1986), Mining Latin America / Minería Latinoamericana, Springer Science & Business Media, ISBN 978-94-017-2286-5, retrieved 2016-07-30
- The Company - History, Mineração Taboca, retrieved 2016-07-29
- Waimiri Atroari: Contact Situation, ISA: Instituto Socioambiental, retrieved 2016-07-29
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