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Home Science & Technology Science

Traces of 16th-century air pollution found deep in Peru’s ice cap

byCustoms Today Report
10/02/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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PARIS: Scientists announced Monday that traces of air pollution from 16th-century Spanish silver mines were discovered deep inside an ice cap in the Peruvian Andes.

Though the imprint of metal-rich smog was discovered in Peru, the pollution likely originated hundreds of miles away, in what is now Bolivia, at the Potosí mountaintop silver mines.

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At an altitude of about 13,120 feet (4,000 meters), Potosí is designated a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its rich industrial history. The Inca people had been extracting and refining silver from Potosí for generations before the Spanish arrived. But during the colonial period, mining activity boomed, and Potosí became known as the largest source of silver in the world. By the 17th century, about 160,000 colonists lived in Potosí alongside about 13,500 indigenous people who were forced to work the mines under a system of mandatory labor, according to UNESCO

The success of the mines depended largely on amalgamation, a new technology that the Spanish introduced in 1572 to speed up silver production. That refining process involved grinding lead-rich silver ore into a powder and mixing it with mercury.

Thick clouds of lead-laden dust were probably released into the atmosphere during milling. Some of that pollution was apparently swept 500 miles (800 kilometers) northwest, where it settled on the Quelccaya Ice Cap in the Andes Mountains in southern Peru.

Tags: Peruvian AndesSpanish silver minesTraces of air pollutionTraces of air pollution found deep in Peru’s iceUNESCO World Heritage site

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