History of the Amazon (Plínio de Camargo) - Amazon-PIRE
Transcription
History of the Amazon (Plínio de Camargo) - Amazon-PIRE
PIRE 09 History of Amazon • 1492 – 6 to 12 million indians in the Amazon region (Hecht and Cockburn, 1990) Indians Tapirapes Photo: R.H. Tapie (1930) •1494 - Tordesilhas • 1500 - Pedro Alvarez Cabral arrived in Brazil Route of Portuguese boats – 1415 - 1700 Painting – Benedito Calixto Discovery of Brazil Eduardo Bueno (2003) The discovery of a river • 1541 February – Gonzalo Pizarro & Francisco Orellana left Quito (Equador) towards the Amazon basin searching for cinamon. 200 horses, 1,000 hunting dogs, 2,000 pigs, 4,000 indians and 250 spanish soldiers (Bueno, 2003) • 1541 December – After crossing the Andean Cordilheira no more pigs or horses to feed the expedition. Pizarro order Orellana to built a boat and launched it in to the water after the confluence of the rivers Napo and Aguárico. Orellana, 57 soldiers and Frey Gaspar de Carvajal start their historical trip into the Amazon basin. • 1542 August – Orellana, Carvajal and 48 soldiers arrived in the Atlantic. source:www.bresalien.de www.daniel.duguay.free.fr •Discovery of the Rio Negro....”On the same day we saw the mouth of another big river, on the left side, which entered that one in which we navigated and of water as black as ink, and therefore we gave it the name of Rio Negro. It ran so much and with such ferocity that for more than 20 léguas (110 km) if made a stripe in the other water without mixing with that one” (Translaction by Harold Sioli). • 1580 to 1640 – Spain and Portugal are under the same crown Belém S. Luís • 1612 – French soldiers found the city of São Luís •1616, January – Captain Castello Branco: foundation of Belém •1637, November 28 - Pedro Teixeira first expedition Belém-Quito-Belém. 70 soldiers and 1200 indians in 47 canoas of good size • 1638, June 24 – Pedro Teixeira arrives in Quito • 1639, February 16 – Pedro Teixeira leaves Quito • 1639, December 12 – Pedro Teixeira arrives in Belém “Many fishes have special peculiarites,e.g. one, the indians call Peraque, has the shape of an enormous eel or better of a small Conger. And the person who touches this fish begins to tremble all over like attached by shivers of Malaria, and it lasts as long as there is a contact between the fish and this person, stopping immediately when letting loose the fish” (Translation of H. Sioli, 1984) 1637, November 1639, December 1638, June 1639, February • 1640 – Portugal separates from Spain after 60 years • 1647 – Raposo Tavares Expedition •1661 – Foundation of Santarém •1682 – Commercial Company of the Maranhão & Grão-Pará: “drogas do sertão” •1699 – Foundation of the fort São José do Rio Negro (Manaus) by the Portuguese 1661- Santarém 1690 – S.Gabriel 1616- Belém 1740- Tabatinga 1709- Tefé 1612- S.Luís 1699- Manaus 1639- Gurupá 1776- Porto Velho ·1736 – The French Académie des Sciences Charls Marie de la Condamine. First “scientist” in the Amazon region. First to describe rubber (caucho) Source: Bueno (2003) •1760 – Marquis of Pombal x Jesuítas • 1772 – States of Grão-Pará and Rio Negro linked direct to Portugal •1777 – Marquis of Pombal sent his brother Xavier de Mendonça Furtado to govern states of Maranhão and Pará. Importance of this region •1792, January return of this expedition to Belém. Book: “Jornadas Filosóficas” • 1800 – Belém was exporting rubber shoes to New England Source: Bueno (2003) • 1808 – States of Grão-Pará and Rio Negro not more directly linked to Portugal. Now they also belonged to Brazil • 1822 – Independence of Brazil from Portugal •1835-1840 – Cabanagem – alliance of forest peoples, exploited Indianas, impoverished caboclos, and fugitive slaves from the quilombos could no longer endure the economic monopoly and oppresion of the oligarchs. D.Pedro I – the first king of Brazil • 1817 – Maria Leopoldina Josefa Carolina de Habsburgo came from Vienna to Rio to maried D.Pedro I. She brought 15 scientists. Among them Johann Baptist von Spix and Carl Friedrich Phillip von Martius. • 1823 – “Reise in Brasilien” • 1908 – “Flora Brasiliensis”: 15 volumes, •20,773 pages, 3.811 drawings, 22,767 species von Martius von Spix THE RUBBER BOOM •1839 – Charles Goodyear – vulcanization of rubber •1839 – 450,000 pairs of shoes from Belém to New England Hevea brasiliensis Latex extraction • 1877 – 100,00 cearenses go to Acre for work as rubber tappers • 1880 – Manaus 50,000 people and 12,000 tons of rubber exported to Europe •1888 – John Dunlop – bikes with rubber tyres • 1896 – Amazon Theatre was open in Manaus •1901 – Karl Benz – cars with rubber tyres •1904 – Manaus, 80,000 tons of rubber exported to Europe • 1906 – Malasya started to produce rubber. • 1913 - This was the end of the rubber boom. Manaus Theatre · 1848 – May 28 arrive in Belém Henry Bates and Alfred Russel Wallace · 1850 – March, 26. Bates goes to the upper Solimões region and Wallace to the upper Rio Negro Wallace Bates Bates & Wallace •1852 – August, 6. Wallace returns to London. ·1853 – “A Narrative of Travels on the Amazon and Rio Negro” by Wallace is published •1858 – Linnean Society (London) “On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely From the Original Type” Alfred Russel Wallace Amazon forest in the Wallace’s book Richard Spruce 1849-1864 worked with Wallace and Bates • 1859 – Bates returns to London with the description of almost 15,000 species of animals • 1863 – Publication of “Naturalist on the river Amazonas” ·1897 – Friedrich Katzer – performed the very first chemical analyses on Amazonian waters (Katzer, 1897) ·1897 – Henry Anatole Coudreau – river courses and tributaries more cartography and hydrography of the rivers. ·1898 – Euclides da Cunha – “the last unwritten page of Genesis” • 1912 – Bluntschli H. 1921 – “Now we become understand that all and everything in Amazonia must stand under their influence from the smallest living being to the activity and the behaviour of mankind...The criculation of the water from the sea through the air to the wooded earth, and from the forest through the plain on the big river back to the eternal ocean, that is the great momentum which dominates the image of Amazonia, its life and its character. Perhaps there is no other place on earth in which the mighty force of the circulation to the waters appears with such transparence and obviousness bofore the spiritual eye of man. In Amazonia, nothing dead and nothing alive exists that could not testify to that”. Translation of Harold Sioli. •1922 – Paul le Cointe – geography, botany, phytochemistry and zoology of the Lower Amazonia 1940 – March to the West •President Getulio Vargas was worried about the “emptiness of people” that he found in Central Brazil and North region during an official visit. • International pressure – suggestion of occupy the Amazon emptiness with foreigners Occupation of Central Brazil area by two initiatives: Roncador-Xingu expedition and Brazil Central Foundation. The first was responsible for explore and map the region, and the second was responsible for set small villages in areas recommended by the Roncador-Xingu expedition. •As consequences of these efforts: 43 villages were established, 19 small runways, contact with more than 5,000 indias, and more than 1,500km of trails was open. Populational density, 2000 Photo: Roncador-Xingu expedition Photo: Roncador-Xingu expedition Xavante indians Orlando Villas-Boas First Xavante indian to speak Portuguese Blue: route of the Roncador-Xingu expedition. www.brasil.oeste.com.br The rubber soldier – the second cycle of rubber in the Amazon • 1942 – Japaneses dominate Malaya in the Pacific region. Malaya was an important region for rubber supply during the WWII. .1942 – USA incentivates the rubber production in the Amazon region • Amazon had the rubber tree (seringueira), but had not the people to collect rubber. • Getúlio Vargas recruited the people in the Northeast region of Brazil. Mass imigration from the Northeast to the Amazon (Rubber soldiers). • Northeast – drought and no work for people Getúlio Vargas 1951-1954 1953 – Law 1806 - Creation of the SPVEA (Superintendency for the Economic Valorization of the Amazon) by the former president Getúlio Vargas “The Amazon, under the impact of our will and labor, shall cease to be a simple chapter in the history of the world, and made equivalent to other great rivers, shall become a chapter in the history of human civilization.... Everything which has up to now been done in Amazonas, whether in agriculture or extractive industry... must be transformed into rational exploitation" (Getúlio Vargas, quoted from Hall 1989)”. Juscelino Kubitschek • Enlarge the legal area of the Amazon including parts of Mato Grosso, Goiás and Maranhão ---- “Amazônia Legal” • Banco de Crédito da Borracha (Rubber Bank) was transformed in the Banco de Crédito da Amazônia (Amazon Bank). 1956-1960 ·1958-1960 – construction of the Belém-Brasília road during the government of Juscelino Kubitschek. First road linking the Central Brazil with the Amazon region •April 1960 – 2,000 km from Brasília (the new Capital) to Belém ·1959-1963 – 54200 km2 of state lands were transferred to private owners • Imperatriz –MA: huge increase in the population size 250,000 Belém Population 200,000 150,000 Belém-Brasília 1960 100,000 50,000 0 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Brasília Urban centers Deforestation Colonization Focus of heat Marabá Para WRS2, Path 223, Row 64 LandSat TM - TRFIC 1996 1986 http://www.bsrsi.msu.edu/trfic/browser/legalamazon_frame.html Marabá June, 1996 – June, 1997 http://www2.ibama.gov.br/desmata/desm_frame.php3?ano=1997&lang=ing Rio Branco, Acre, 407ha, August 2000 ---- August 2001 http://www2.ibama.gov.br/desmata/desm_frame.php3?ano=1997&lang=ing Castello Branco 1964-1967 J. Goulart 1963-1964 Costa e Silva 1967-1969 E. Médici 1969-1974 Militar Dictatorship - 1964 E. Geisel J.B. Figueiredo 1974-1979 1979-1985 End of the militar dictatorship J. Sarney F. Collor 1985-1990 1990-1992 I.Franco F.H. Cardoso Lula 20031992-1995 1995-2003 Civilian Presidents F.H. Cardoso Lula 1984 – End of the militar dictator ship Operação Amazônia – “Amazonian occupation will proceed as though we are waging a strategically conduceted war” (translation of Hecht and Cockburn, 1990) Castello Branco “Plano de Valorização Econômica da Amazônia” – October, 27, 1966 1964-1967 (Plan of Economical Valorization of the Amazon) SUDAM – Superintendência do Desenvolvimento da Amazônia BASA – Banco da Amazônia • Research programme --- economical potential of the region • “Development poles” --- areas with special economical interest would be fully incentivate through tax and trade breaks, land concessions and all sort of fiscal incentives • Government will be responsible for all development of infrastructure Gen.Golbery and his book • Creation of a stable, self-sustaining population • Adoption of a immigration policy by the government • Incentives to agriculture and livestock • Exploitation of several tree species, including silviculture and increase of the productivity of the regional extractivism, unless a more profitable activity could be conducted in the region. Fiscal incentives only for large and powerfull groups or people • 50% of the tax liability could be invested in already existing Amazonian projects for the next 12 years • 100% of the tax liability could be invested in new projects (prior to 1972) for the next 12 years • 75% of the costs of projects in the Amazon would be supplied by the government • For livestock operations funds would be available for buy land with grace periods of 4 to 8 years with a very low interest rates “Land price went up and became a vehicle for capturing incentives, cheap credits, and itself assumed the form of a speculative instrument and an object of exchange rather than being an input into production” (Hecht and Cockburn, 1990) Laborers and squatters that came to the Amazon from other regions of Brazil had not acess to the land ------- increasing the social tension. Brazilian Comunist Part (PC do B) organizes the “Guerrilha do Araguaia” Porto Velho Belém-Brasília 1960 Rio Branco BR-364 Cuiabá-PV 1968 Photo: Romeu Batistella -http://www.ecof.org.br/projetos/tejo/057.html Cuiabá • 1968: Cuiabá-Porto Velho Highway (BR-364) • 1,500km • Population of Rondônia in 1960: 70,000 • 80% of the State was covered by intact forests • Massive wave of migration to Rondônia Costa e Silva 1967-1969 PIN first phase: building of the Transamazônica and Cuiabá-Santarém highway (1970) Transamazônica 1972 Transmazônica (1972): 5,600km from Recife to Boqueirão da Esperança. However only 2,500km were built from Aguiarnópolis to Lábrea, only 29km BR-364 Cuiabá-PV 1968 Belém-Brasília 1960 were paved The hope of the President Médici and his minister CuiabáSantarém 1976 was to allocate people from the dry Northeast into the Amazon through programes of colonization. Second phase: INCRA (National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform) and PROTERRA a line of credit for small farmers - 1971. • Transportation to the Amazon (TransAmazon road) • A plot of 100ha (240 acre) • Guaranteed credit for the planting of rice, beans,etc • Six month household subsidy • By the end of 1974 only 5,700 families had settled www.ari.org.br photo: Prensa Três (Fearnside, 1986) “Transamazônica is also Brasil” Planfet produced by the Regional Council of Development of Transamazônica and Low Xingu National Development Plan-II (1975-1979) and III (1980-1984) Second and Third Development Plan for Amazônia (The Era of the Big Projects) POLOAMAZÔNIA: same concept of the “desenvolviment pole” of the first militar president Castello Branco in 1967 – 15 poles of “development” E. Geisel 1974-1979 10. Roraima livestock 4. Trombetas bauxite 9. Tefé oil & timber J.B. Figueiredo 1979-1985 15. Marajó livestock 5. Altamira livestock & agriculture 13. Juruena livestock 2. Carajás iron & gold 3. Araguaia-Tocatins livestock & trading zone 8. Acre livestock & agriculture 1. Xingu-Araguai livestock 7. Rondônia livestock & agriculture Figure from Hecht and Cockburn, 1990 14. Aripuanã forest research Projeto Grande Carajás - 1980 Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD) – Exploration of iron ore and bauxite at the Serra dos Carajás (1980) The Project is composed by the mine itself, a railroad (1984) linking the mine with the Port of Itaqui in São Luís do Maranhão. Axel Ferran Garimpo at Serra Pelada “Gold mining at Serra Pelada” Sebastião Salgado Sebastião Salgado •1984 – Tucuruí Hydroelectric Dam 4,000 MW 3 State of Pará Tucuruí – 2430 km2 Urban centers Deforestation Colonization Focus of heat 1985 – End of the Militar Ditactorship in Brazil . • Up to now the majority of plans to “develop” the Amazon had been carried out with strong finnancial support of the international community, specially the World Bank 1985 – starts a strong international pressure on the deforestation that was J. Sarney 1985-1990 occurring in the Amazon basin "Vast Amazon Fires, Man-Made, Linked to Global Warming," New York Times, 8/12/88; "Thousands of Amazon Acres Burning," Washington Post. 9/8/88; "Amazon Jungle Going Up in Smoke Again," New York Times. 10/13/95; "The Amazon Is Burning Again, Officials Say," Reuters. 10/3/97; "Report: Amazon rain forest fading," Associated Press, 4/8/99; and Couzin, J., "The forest still burns." U.S. News & World Report April 19, 1999. As an answer the Sarney government launched two distinct plains. One aimed to increase the militar presence in the Amazon: the Calha Norte project and other – Nossa Natureza (Our Nature) - aimed to demonstrated that the government had environmental concerns about the Amazon. 1987 – Law allowing the establishment of “reservas extrativistas” (extractive reserves) – mainly for latex exploration Chico Mendes •These reserves would be protected from most forms of development or unsustainable extraction of resources (Domansk, 1997). • December 22, 1998, death of Chico Mendes •In February 1988, the first extractive reserve was created at Sao • Luis de Remanso. April 1, 1989 – Program Nossa Natureza (Our Nature) • This was the first government programe with a real environmental concern I – Stop any action that could lead to environmental degradation II – Better organization of organisms involved in environmental protection III – Environmenatal education program IV – Regeneration of disturbed areas V – Protect indian communities and population involved in the extractivism process VI – Ecological zoning Important: temporary suspension of fiscal incentives) for cattle ranching and annual cropping in Amazonia provided by SUDAM. SIVAM I.Franco 1992-1995 The system is intended to help the government of Brazil monitor and control drug-trafficking, smuggling, illegal extraction of the region's natural resources, and to defend national sovereignty in the Amazon region. This way of strengthening and confirming territorial sovereignty and security over the Amazon region is certainly a less destructive alternative than the massive infrastructure-based projects of the past (Domansk, 1997) The Amazonia Agenda 21 • Inclusion of Amazon questions in school curricula, in order to make it a national, not just a regional, concern; Legal Amazon Environmental Control 1996. (1) the two-year suspension of all authorizations and concessions for • Integration of the Brazilian Amazon with the Amazonian regions of other countries; commercial exploitation of Mahogany • Ensuring the multiple use of resources (soil, water, biodiversity), without any one being prejudicial to or excluding another; (Virola surinamensis), which are • Regulation of activities for the prospecting and use of mineral resources; industries in the world’s rainforests”; • Creation of programmes for traditional populations; clear no more than 20 percent (as • Guarantee of the rights of indigenous peoples; 50 percent) of their forested land. (Swietenia macrophylla) on and Virola described as “two of the most lucrative but destructive (2) the requirement that landowners opposed to the earlier requirement of • Creation of efficient systems of surveillance and protection; • Execution of economic-ecological zoning. F.H. Cardoso 1995-2003 Nepstad et al. (2000) - IPAM Nepstad et al. (2000) ? Lula 2003- Cattle herds Population Deforestation 600 Militar Period (1964-1985) 18,000 Construction Cuiabá-Sant. TransAm 400 2 15,000 500 Paving of BR-364 Deforestation (x1000 km ) - Brazilian Amazon Cattle herds & Population (x1000) - Region North 21,000 12,000 9,000 Construction BR-364 highway PROTERRA colonization projects 300 200 6,000 Nossa Natureza 100 3,000 0 19 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 0 20100 Decades Calha Norte Construction Belém-Brasília highway Beginning of fiscal incentives to cattle ranchs by SUDAM Sivam PROTERRA colonization projects PoloAmazônia The Era of the Big Projects Death of Chico Mendes Avança Brasil