17-year-old Jennie reveals the dangers illegal mining poses to the Amazon and its peoples
Hydraulic gold mining is a destructive process driving deforestation in the Amazon.
3 April 2026
Cancer in the Amazon Basin: A metastasis of illegal mining
The world breathes as the Amazon exhales. This is the philosophy of the Western world, the simplified poetry of conservation. The rivers carry sediment, memory and movement from Peru to Brazil.
Thousands of species native to the forest are found nowhere else on Earth, and spiritual geographies belonging to hundreds of Indigenous tribes flourish along the waterway. To these peoples who have called its depths home, the rainforest is the grammar of their existence: the source of every story, every medicine and every god.
This elegant image of undisturbed tribes living in harmony with nature has become a powerful emblem for environmentalists. It suggests a simple equation: protecting the tribes is protecting the forest. Yet this relationship conceals a far more complex and urgent dilemma.
As national governments draw borders on maps to create conservation parks, outside forces press against ancient territories through illegal miningand oil concessions, a profound question emerges: are we trying to save the Amazon, or are we trying to save an idea of it? And when the continuity of a culture depends on a landscape that is being actively unmade, what are we truly trying to preserve?
The Amazon spansroughly 6.7 million sq km across nine South American countries with its rivers supplying nearly 20% of the world’s riverine freshwater to the oceans. It is estimated that one in ten known species on Earth lives in the basin. Far from a static wilderness, the Amazon functions as a vast and dynamic ecological engine.
Brazilian archaeologist Eduardo Góes Neves’ recent research suggeststhat the forest was densely populated over eight millennia ago, long before European ambition reached South American soil. In traditional Indigenous folklore native to this land, the Amazon and the Andes together formed a formidable ecological barrier to colonial expansion.
Of the hundreds of Indigenous groups living within the Amazon basin, communities such as the Yanomami, the Kayapó and the Wampis Nation occupy territories that function simultaneously as cultural archives and ecological strongholds. For these communities, geography is inseparable from identity.
Archaeological evidence indicates that many parts of the Amazon were shaped by centuries of Indigenous land management, including controlled burning, agroforestry systems and soil-enrichment techniques such as terra preta (‘black earth’ in Portuguese). The forest’s apparent wildness contains traces of deliberate cultivation.
Today, in the present, the Amazon is no longer only shaped by the slow rhythms of rivers or the seasonal logic of fire. Increasingly, human ambition is reshaping the fate of the forest, often at the expense of biodiversity and Indigenous cultural heritage.
Mining of protected areas
Industrial mining has long extracted minerals such as iron, bauxite and gold through large-scale regulated operations. Over the past decade, however, a far more destructive form of mineral extraction has expanded rapidly. Known locally as garimpo, these small-scale and often illegal gold-mining operations have spread across protected and Indigenous territories. In 2022 alone, the area occupied by garimpo in the Brazilian Amazon reached about 2,630 sq km – an increase of roughly 341 sq km from the previous year – and nearly 848 sq km larger than the footprint of regulated industrial mining.
