Cerro de la Sal

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Range coordinates10°41′28″S 75°16′23″W / 10.691°S 75.273°W / -10.691; -75.273
Cerro de la Sal
Cerro de la Sal is located in Peru
Cerro de la Sal
Cerro de la Sal
Geography
LocationPasco Department, Peru
Range coordinates10°41′28″S 75°16′23″W / 10.691°S 75.273°W / -10.691; -75.273

The Cerro de la Sal or Cerro de Sal, (Mountain of Salt) is located in Villa Rica District of Oxapampa Province in Pasco Department, Peru. The Cerro de la Sal was an important source of salt for the pre-Columbian indigenous people of the Amazon Basin in Peru. Because of the seasonal concentration at the mountain by indigenous people (Indians), especially the Asháninka and Yanesha (Amuesha), Spanish missionaries, settlers, and soldiers were attracted to the Cerro de la Sal as early as 1635. Several attempts by Franciscan missionaries to establish Roman Catholic missions in the area were thwarted by uprisings of the indigenous people. In the late 19th century the Peruvian government established a foothold leading to the settlement of Europeans and Andean peoples in the area.

Cerro de la Sal is used loosely to refer to the surrounding region and to the chain of mountains extending eastward from the salt deposits.

Google Earth locates the Cerro de la Sal about 7 kilometres (4.3 miles) north of the town of Villa Rica.[1] José Amich, an 18th-century Franciscan missionary, described the Cerro (mountain or hill) as shaped like a loaf of bread, running for "three leagues," 12.5 kilometres (7.8 miles), to the southwest and many more leagues to the northeast. The vein of salt was on the surface near the summit of the mountain and was "thirty varas," 23 metres (75 ft) wide. The salt was mixed with stone and red clay. The Cerro de la Sal extends southwestern to near the Paucartambo River which merges with the Chanchamayo River from the south. Below the junction, the river was initially called the River de la Sal, but later became known as the Perené River. The rivers were the principal means of transporting the salt from the Cerro to the people living in the lowlands of the Amazon Basin.[2][3]

The Cerro de la Sal has an elevation of about 1,750 metres (5,740 ft) and is surrounded by higher mountains that rise to a maximum elevation of about 2,800 metres (9,200 ft).[4] Below elevations of about 1,550 metres (5,090 ft) the climate is tropical rainforest (Af in the Köppen Classification). Above that elevation the climate is sub-tropical (Cfb in the Köppen Classification).[5]

Indigenous people

In pre-Columbian times, the indigenous people living in the Cerro de la Sal area had commercial relationships with the Inca Empire, but retained their independence.[6]

The Cerro de la Sal was the preferred source of salt for the region to the east called the Gran Pajonal with indications that it was traded as far away as Brazil to the Tupi people, despite the difficulty of transporting water-soluble salt in a humid region.[7] The Asháninka or Campa who lived in the Amazon basin east of the Cerro and in the Gran Pajonal, seem to have exercised control over the salt deposits, bartering the rights to mine the salt for feathers, birds, monkeys, clothes, and other items with other peoples. The Yanesa (Amuesha), who lived north of the Cerro, were also present.[8]

The Asháninka and others congregated near the Cerro by the hundreds in the comparatively dry months of July through September to mine the salt. The workers cut blocks of salt from the vein weighing approximately 20 kilograms (44 lb) each. Each block was carried by a porter a few kilometers to the Paucartambo River. The salt was loaded onto balsa wood rafts and transported down the river to the peoples living in the low jungles of the Amazon Basin. As many as 600 rafts per season carried salt down the rivers.[9]

During the other nine months of the year the Cerro de la Sal was almost abandoned. A Spanish expedition in May 1691 found only 44 people there of whom a few were mining salt.[10] Reasons for the seasonality of people at the Cerro de la Sal include the difficulty of navigating the flooded highland rivers during the rainy season and the fact that the Cerro has an elevation above the 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) maximum elevation for the cultivation of manioc, the principal food crop of the indigenous people of the low jungles.[11]

Catholic missionaries

Peru gains control

References

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