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Craig Thomas

Amazon Gold Ventures Limited: Avoid Scam With Our Unbiased Reviews And Find A Good Home... - 0 views

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    Tired of falling for business opportunities and franchises that don't live up to their promises? Try our revealing reviews - unique forensic analyses that expose the good, the bad and the ugly This site is financed by you, instead of by biz opp ads and commission links You pay us to be unbiased - so we are "It's the only unbiased info on the market that I've come across."Carl, BusinessOpportunity Watch member since 2005 Review of SHARON FUSSELL SOLD DISPATCH NOW GOLD Make money selling books on Amazon Canonbury Publishing Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review extract from: August 2009 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYWATCH Issue No. 30 Buy the Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review for £3 or Members Only Area - Free Trial - Read All Reviews Extract from review of Sold Dispatch Now Sharon Fussell: Sharon Fussell says that her Sold Dispatch Now Gold business "is as simple as buying books for pennies from easy-to-find sources - and then reselling them on for huge profits". She says you can make £200 to £300 every week with Sold Dispatch Now Gold and "you can set it up in just 10 minutes!", it's not hard work and you don't need computer experience. You don't need a lot of books either - according to Sharon Fussell, a stock of 500-600 books means that you can sell 25 per week and make £6,000 a year. You just buy the books from easy-to-find sources (she tells you how) and list them for sale on Amazon. Sharon Fussell has been following the Sold Dispatch Now Gold system for three years and she now has a turnover of £26,741 a year. She's given up her old day job. The Sold Dispatch Now Gold manual costs £77 and it does come with a CD Rom demonstration of how Sharon Fussell operates her business and it includes her email support and a 28-day no-quibble money back guarantee. Is it really that easy to make £200 to £300 a week? We sent the company a number of questions ........ (review continues) Discover the truth about Sharon Fussell's Sold Dispatch Now
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    Tired of falling for business opportunities and franchises that don't live up to their promises? Try our revealing reviews - unique forensic analyses that expose the good, the bad and the ugly This site is financed by you, instead of by biz opp ads and commission links You pay us to be unbiased - so we are "It's the only unbiased info on the market that I've come across."Carl, BusinessOpportunity Watch member since 2005 Review of SHARON FUSSELL SOLD DISPATCH NOW GOLD Make money selling books on Amazon Canonbury Publishing Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review extract from: August 2009 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYWATCH Issue No. 30 Buy the Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review for £3 or Members Only Area - Free Trial - Read All Reviews Extract from review of Sold Dispatch Now Sharon Fussell: Sharon Fussell says that her Sold Dispatch Now Gold business "is as simple as buying books for pennies from easy-to-find sources - and then reselling them on for huge profits". She says you can make £200 to £300 every week with Sold Dispatch Now Gold and "you can set it up in just 10 minutes!", it's not hard work and you don't need computer experience. You don't need a lot of books either - according to Sharon Fussell, a stock of 500-600 books means that you can sell 25 per week and make £6,000 a year. You just buy the books from easy-to-find sources (she tells you how) and list them for sale on Amazon. Sharon Fussell has been following the Sold Dispatch Now Gold system for three years and she now has a turnover of £26,741 a year. She's given up her old day job. The Sold Dispatch Now Gold manual costs £77 and it does come with a CD Rom demonstration of how Sharon Fussell operates her business and it includes her email support and a 28-day no-quibble money back guarantee. Is it really that easy to make £200 to £300 a week? We sent the company a number of questions ........ (review continues) Discover the truth about Sharon Fussell's Sold Dispatch Now.
Shawn Webster

Bing Amazon Gold Ventures:Review of Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold - Avoid Scam ... - 0 views

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    Tired of falling for business opportunities and franchises that don't live up to their promises? Try our revealing reviews - unique forensic analyses that expose the good, the bad and the ugly This site is financed by you, instead of by biz opp ads and commission links You pay us to be unbiased - so we are "It's the only unbiased info on the market that I've come across." Carl, Business Opportunity Watch member since 2005 Review of SHARON FUSSELL SOLD DISPATCH NOW GOLD Make money selling books on Amazon Canonbury Publishing Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review extract from: August 2009 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY WATCH Issue No. 30 Buy the Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review for £3 or Members Only Area - Free Trial - Read All Reviews Extract from review of Sold Dispatch Now Sharon Fussell: Sharon Fussell says that her Sold Dispatch Now Gold business "is as simple as buying books for pennies from easy-to-find sources - and then reselling them on for huge profits". She says you can make £200 to £300 every week with Sold Dispatch Now Gold and "you can set it up in just 10 minutes!", it's not hard work and you don't need computer experience. You don't need a lot of books either - according to Sharon Fussell, a stock of 500-600 books means that you can sell 25 per week and make £6,000 a year. You just buy the books from easy-to-find sources (she tells you how) and list them for sale on Amazon. Sharon Fussell has been following the Sold Dispatch Now Gold system for three years and she now has a turnover of £26,741 a year. She's given up her old day job. The Sold Dispatch Now Gold manual costs £77 and it does come with a CD Rom demonstration of how Sharon Fussell operates her business and it includes her email support and a 28-day no-quibble money back guarantee. Is it really that easy to make £200 to £300 a week? We sent the company a number of questions ........ (review continues) Discover the truth about Sharon Fussell's
Scott Edison

Amazon Gold Ventures:Review of Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold - Avoid Scam With ... - 0 views

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    Tired of falling for business opportunities and franchises that don't live up to their promises? Try our revealing reviews - unique forensic analyses that expose the good, the bad and the ugly This site is financed by you, instead of by biz opp ads and commission links You pay us to be unbiased - so we are "It's the only unbiased info on the market that I've come across."Carl, Business Opportunity Watch member since 2005 Review of SHARON FUSSELL SOLD DISPATCH NOW GOLD Make money selling books on Amazon Canonbury Publishing Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review extract from: August 2009 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY WATCH Issue No. 30 Buy the Sharon Fussell Sold Dispatch Now Gold Review for £3 or Members Only Area - Free Trial - Read All Reviews Extract from review of Sold Dispatch Now Sharon Fussell: Sharon Fussell says that her Sold Dispatch Now Gold business "is as simple as buying books for pennies from easy-to-find sources - and then reselling them on for huge profits". She says you can make £200 to £300 every week with Sold Dispatch Now Gold and "you can set it up in just 10 minutes!", it's not hard work and you don't need computer experience. You don't need a lot of books either - according to Sharon Fussell, a stock of 500-600 books means that you can sell 25 per week and make £6,000 a year. You just buy the books from easy-to-find sources (she tells you how) and list them for sale on Amazon. Sharon Fussell has been following the Sold Dispatch Now Gold system for three years and she now has a turnover of £26,741 a year. She's given up her old day job. The Sold Dispatch Now Gold manual costs £77 and it does come with a CD Rom demonstration of how Sharon Fussell operates her business and it includes her email support and a 28-day no-quibble money back guarantee. Is it really that easy to make £200 to £300 a week? We sent the company a number of questions ........ (review continues) Discover the truth about Sharon Fussell's Sold Dispatch Now. I
Amazon Deals

AMAZON SCAM-Amazon Gold Ventures: Kleiner Perkins Hopes To Turn A Black Eye Into Black ... - 0 views

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    amazongolddeals - AMAZON SCAM-Amazon Gold Ventures: Kleiner Perkins Hopes To Turn A Black Eye Into Black Gold - Top News - Zimbio hartbarley : I believe quite privileged to get used your webpages and look toward really more fabulous minutes reading here. Many thanks for many things. less than a minute ago Reply clawiecoxx : I have to admit that I am within the hand of luck today in any other case getting this excellent post to see wouldn't have been achievable personally, at least. about 3 hours ago Reply emeraldruby48 : When a start-up called NEOS GeoSolutions Inc. announced last month that it raised $60 million in venture capital from Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and others, it made no reference to its troubled predecessor. Most publications didn't either, perhaps also distracted by Gates' involvement, wondering, for instance, if the philanthropist and green investor was "hypocritical" for putting money into a company that uses data analysis and geophysical sensors to help oil and gas companies find the best place to drill. But it turns out that NEOS GeoSolutions is formerly Terralliance Technologies Inc., which Kleiner Perkins, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Passport Capital poured hundreds of millions of dollars into before the company stumbled amid controversy over its technology and spending. 4 days ago Reply emeraldruby48 : When a start-up called NEOS GeoSolutions Inc. announced last month that it raised $60 million in venture capital from Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and others, it made no reference to its troubled predecessor. Most publications didn't either, perhaps also distracted by Gates' involvement, wondering, for instance, if the philanthropist and green investor was "hypocritical" for putting money into a company that uses data analysis and geophysical sensors to help oil and gas companies find t
Brad Hemington

Amazon Gold Ventures Deals: Amazon Rainforest Imperiled In Gold Rush - 0 views

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    Record prices push new speculators into mining business Simeon TegelGlobal Post PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible
Brad Hemington

Tagza - Amazon Gold Ventures Deals: Amazon Rainforest Imperiled In Gold Rush - 0 views

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    Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible for destroying more than 70 square miles of tropical rainforest since the gold rush began, and dumping an estimated 35 metric tons a year of mercury into Madre de Dios's streams, rivers and jungle, according to envir
Shawn Webster

News Blog - Amazon Ventures Gold Deals - 0 views

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    Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible for destroying more than 70 square miles of tropical rainforest since the gold rush began, and dumping an estimated 35 metric tons a year of mercury into Madre de Dios's streams, rivers and jungle, according to environmentalists. Many live in sprawling, dangerous camps deep in the Amazon, beyond the reach of the law, where guns, cheap liquor and brothels packed with teenage prostitutes proliferate. "This issue is now too big for the regional government," says Herrera. "Either the national government tackles this problem, or it is effectively handing Madre de Dios over to the criminal gangs, with everything that implies, not just for the environment but for public safety and the rule of law." Government crackdowns, including several major operations in 2011 involving police, the army, navy and air force, to seize and destroy the miners' equipment, including dredges that plunder riverbeds and disrupt the rainforest's delicate ecological balance, have not stopped the problem. That is partly a question of economics. The government charges a paltry sum for mining concessions - between $0.50 and $1 per hectare per year - compared
Shawn Webster

Best content in Amazon Ventures Gold Deals | Diigo - Groups - 0 views

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    Amazon Deals about 4 hours ago Record prices push new speculators into mining business Simeon TegelGlobal Post PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold
Shawn Webster

Amazon Gold Ventures Deals : Amazon rainforest imperiled in gold rush | News Blog - Am... - 0 views

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    PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible for destroying more than 70 square miles of tropical rainforest s
Shawn Webster

Amazon Ventures Gold Deals - Amazon Gold Ventures Deals : Amazon rainforest imperile... - 0 views

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    Record prices push new speculators into mining business Simeon TegelGlobal Post PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible
Craig Thomas

Newsvine - News Blog - Amazon Ventures Gold Deals - 0 views

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    Record prices push new speculators into mining business Simeon TegelGlobal Post PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible for destr
Craig Thomas

Amazon Gold Ventures Deals: Amazon Rainforest Imperiled In Gold Rush | Value Investing ... - 0 views

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    Record prices push new speculators into mining business Simeon TegelGlobal Post PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible
Hillary Mcduff

Amazon Gold Ventures Deals : Amazon rainforest imperiled in gold rush | Multiply - 0 views

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    PUERTO MALDONADO, Peru - Record gold prices are claiming an unlikely victim: the lush, spectacularly biodiverse rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon. Since the global economy fell off the edge of a cliff in 2008, sending investors scrambling to put their money into the ultimate safe haven, gold, thousands of illegal miners have flooded into the Madre de Dios region of central Peru. Now they are ravaging its pristine tropical rainforests and river systems, including some of Peru's most important nature reserves, using primitive mining techniques to churn through vast quantities of the region's rich, sandy soils, sparkling with specks of the precious metal. As the do so, they poison the water table with mercury and carve out vast, toxic holes in the virgin jungle. "It is a disaster zone," says Jorge Herrera, director of the southern Amazon program for the Peruvian branch of the World Wildlife Fund. "The environmental cost is extremely high. That is partly due to the techniques used, but also to the irreplaceable biodiversity that this region harbors." Since the global financial crisis in 2008, investor capital has fled to a standard haven: gold. Prices for the yellow metal reached record highs this year, raising the incentive to get the gold out of the ground. Impoverished people in rural areas became artisanal miners. Companies sprang up with new machinery, and governments tapped in, too. In Latin America, everyone is finding a way to get in on the scramble. Estimates of the number of miners in Madre de Dios range between 40,000 and 50,000. According to the Peruvian Society for Environmental Law, which is known by its Spanish initials, SPDA, just 3 percent of them are legal, working formal concessions with environmental permits and approved equipment. These miners produce roughly one fifth of Peru's annual total of 175 metric tons of gold. They are also responsible for destroying more than 70 square miles of tropical rainforest s
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