MIJ GOTHENBURG
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BY NICOLAS BERLINGER, SANDRA DANIEL, SARA ISTEFAN & KELSEY LESCOP
JANUARY 4, 2023 | 16:00 CET
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There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
By Nicolas Berlinger
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders.
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
“Insert Quote from Text Here. Swiss Gold Refining is very very naughty”
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of
There is one myth that has captivated the imaginations of adventurers and miners since the arrival of Europeans on the American continent: the search for “El Dorado”, a mythical golden city hidden somewhere deep in the hinterlands of the Amazonas jungle.
For some, El Dorado was once a real place: a city of gold and dreams clinging to the edge of the jungle. This city, La Pampa, an illegal mining town in the Madre de Dios region of Peru, was founded 500 years after the arrival of the conquistadores, but there were no shining gold roofs nor much glamor. The city was a hotbed for local organized crime and illegal miners and traders. It played host to human trafficking, forced prostitution, and child labor and was ground zero for a slow-burning environmental disaster.