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The Rubber Boom (1870
-1918)
Originally, all rubber was produced from the
latex of three Amazonian tree species (Hevea
brasiliensis, Hevea guyanensis and Castilloa
elastica). By the end of the 19th century
demand by industrialized nations for the
manufacture of water resistant coatings and
car tyres had led to a rubber boom.
The Peruvian rubber boom began in the north
of the country, where it fuelled the growth
of ports such as Iquitos and Yurimaguas. It
did not arrive in Madre de Dios until the
beginning of the 20th century, as access to
the area was extremely difficult.
In the 1890s the efforts of Carlos
Fitzcarrald linked the river systems of the
Urubamba and Manu, making access to the
southern forests possible from the north.
The first era of colonisation had begun.
Transport costs remained high, however,
until a trans-Andean route was opened up in
1906 from Puno to Astillero on the Upper
Tambopata River. Rubber extraction
intensified thereafter and Madre de Dios
became a major producer, responsible in 1915
for 23% of Peru's total production.
The rubber boom ended as suddenly as it had
begun with the establishment of rubber
plantations in East Asia using seeds stolen
from Peru by the Englishman Henry A. Wickham
in 1876. The area's importance quickly
declined and workers left Madre de Dios in
the thousands. |