Published 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Sounds of Melting Mountains: A Sound Cartography of Mining in Minas Gerais, Brazil

Description

This essay addresses the sounds of Brazilian mining, focusing on the State of Minas Gerais,
where two recent catastrophes occurred as a result of the collapse of mining tailings dams:
Mariana and Brumadinho. The purpose of this article is to develop a sound cartography that
articulates different dimensions of the exploratory processes of extractivism, an
economic model that has become central in Brazil since colonial times, and which
establishes a relationship with the Earth as an inexhaustible supplier of natural resources.
Mining structures complex relationships that range from endless perforations of the Earth
and the opening of monstrous craters that ravage entire ecosystems to capital flows that
enrich the stock market, but keep the population's basic needs unmet. The path
followed in this text crosses multiple aspects that make up the sounds of mining and that are
symbols of the predatory action that humans have continually exerted on their
surroundings. The human species has forgotten that it is ontologically a constitutive
part of the environment and that its actions result in ever-increasing changes in the fine
fabric that connects beings and forms the biosphere. Mining is one of these actions and a
symbol of a way of life that has led us to the critical moment we are in.

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