Saturday, 14 December 2024
Home Topics Climate Biodiversity Study finds mercury contamination in Brazil’s Yanomami people
BiodiversityClimateEnvironmentIndigenousMiningNews

Study finds mercury contamination in Brazil’s Yanomami people

58
A structure to remove gold and cassiterite is pictured at the banks of Couto de Magalhaes river, Brazil, December 6, 2023. Indigenous people from nine villages were found to be contaminated by mercury, with those living closer to illegal gold mining sites presenting higher levels of contamination, a study released on Thursday found. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino/ File Photo

RIO DE JANEIRO – Indigenous people from nine villages in Brazil’s Yanomami territory were found to be contaminated by mercury, with those living closer to illegal gold mining sites presenting higher levels of contamination, a study released on Thursday found.

The study by Brazil’s state-run Fiocruz institute collected hair samples from about 287 Indigenous people in October 2022. They all tested positive for contamination by mercury, with around 11% of the samples presenting high levels of the heavy metal, which is used by wildcat miners in Brazil to separate gold from ore and earth.

The Yanomami, estimated to number about 28,000, live in Brazil’s largest Indigenous reservation, in the northern states of Roraima and Amazonas. They face a humanitarian crisis due to the invasion of their lands by illegal miners that has caused malnutrition and deaths.

“This scenario of vulnerability exponentially increases the risk of illness in children living in the region,” specially in those under five years-old, Paulo Basta, who coordinated the study, said in a statement.

Links to other health issues

Indigenous people with higher levels of mercury presented cognitive deficits and more often presented nerve damage on their bodies’ extremities, according to the study.

Over 80% of those who participated in the study told researchers they had had malaria at some point.

Over 25% of children under 11 in the study were anemic, and almost half had acute malnutrition. Around 80% were shorter than expected for their age, suggesting chronic malnutrition as well, the study found.

All of the 47 samples of fish collected by Fiocruz researchers also tested positive for mercury contamination.

“Our children are being born sick. Women are sick, our old people are sick! Our people are dying because of mining,” Dario Kopenawa, head of the Yanomami’s Hutukara Association said in a press statement that accompanied the study.

(Reporting by Fabio Teixeira; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Related Articles

FILE - Visitors look at manatees at the Tampa Electric Company Manatee Viewing Center near the coal-fired Big Bend Power Station in Apollo Beach, Fla., on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024. Center volunteers estimate that over 1,000 of the gentle creatures are enjoying the warm water that gets discharged from the power plant. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)
ClimateCourtsEmissionsPolitics

Young activists take on a government agency in a Florida climate lawsuit

The case is one in a string of lawsuits filed by kids...

ClimateClimate FinanceEnvironmentPoliticsUnited Nations

UN talks fail to reach agreement on dealing with rising risk of global drought

5 billion people could be affected by drying lands by the end...

FILE PHOTO: The logo of China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) is seen at its booth during the China International Fair for Trade in Services (CIFTIS) in Beijing, China September 1, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/File Photo
BusinessFuelNatural GasOil

China’s CNOOC sells US assets to Britain’s INEOS

The deal primarily includes non-operator interests in oil and gas projects such...

FILE PHOTO: Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic looks on during a press conference in Belgrade, Serbia, November 6, 2024. REUTERS/Zorana Jevtic/File Photo
FuelOilPoliticsTrade

US mulls sanctions against Serbian oil firm majority owned by Russians, president says

UK and EU sanctions would likely follow, affecting oil shipments through a...

Login into your Account

Please login to like, dislike or bookmark this article.