Cerro de San Pedro
Cerro de San Pedro is a village and seat of the Municipality of Cerro de San Pedro, located in the state of San Luis Potosí in central Mexico. It is located in hills, 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) northeast of the city of San Luis Potosí.
As of 2005, the population was 95.[1] The townsite is now threatened by the new and adjacent open pit gold mining operations.[2]
Location[]
The village is located in the central part of the state, at 2,040 metres (6,690 ft) above sea level. The village borders Soledad de Graciano Sánchez on the north and west, Armadillo de los Infante on the east, and San Luis Potosí city on the southwest, and Villa de Zaragoza on the south. The co-ordinates of the center of the village are 100° 49’ west longitude and 22° 13’ north latitude.
History[]
The hills were in the homelands of the indigenous Chichimeca people and Guachichil people during the Pre-Columbian era.
The village started as a Spanish colonial mining settlement for gold and silver, and was formally established in 1592.[3] It was the founding settlement of the state, and a symbol of its mineral rich hill is prominent in the state's coat of arms. Unfortunately, the hill has disappeared in the 2010s, as a result of the new opencast mine consuming its mass and site.[2]
Mining history[]
In 1592 padre Diego de la Magdalena met with some of the Guachichil peoples in the pueblo of Mesquitique.[3] Among them was one man named Cualiname or Gualiname, who brought attention the golden outlines in their face paintings. The missionary asked him where he had obtained this pigment, and was told there was much of the powder to the east of Mesquitique.
Magdalena told padre Francisco Franco about this discovery, who then told Captain Miguel Caldera, who took possession of the place from the indigenous peoples for the Viceroyalty of New Spain. Captain Caldera sent Gregorio de León, Juan de la Torre, and Pedro de Anda to verify the existence of the minerals.[3] The latter named the locality San Pedro del Potosí, to honor his namesake saint and in memory of the famous mines of the Potosí in Alto Perú of the Viceroyalty of Peru, in present-day Bolivia.
Gold and silver were found in and around the hills of San Pedro, but there was not enough local water to support mining operations. The nearest water source was to the north in the homelands of the Chichimeca people. Hindrances were overcome by 1624,[3] and the mines were rich producers of gold and silver for centuries. The Mesoamerican historian Primo Feliciano Velázquez y Basalenque included extensive descriptions of the Cerro de San Pedro area in his accounts.
Mines[]
Historic gold and silver mines in the Cerro de San Pedro District include:
- Mina La Descubridora
- Mina San Pedro Celestial
- Mina Bisnagas
- Mina Barreno
- Mina Socavon Aventurero
- Mina la Victoria,
- Mina 5 de Mayo
- Mina San Pedro el Alto
- Mina San Pedro el Bajo
- Mina Catillas (located on Bufa Hill)
- Mina Begonia
- Mina Socavon del Rey
- Mina Dorotea
- Mina La Encantada
- Mina La Flor
- Tiro San Pedro
- Tiro Juarez
- Mina Cañon de las Mulas
- Mina Salon Colorado
Main shafts[]
- San Pedro shaft
- Juarez shaft
- Begonia shaft
Contemporary mining[]
In the 20th century the mines were operated by several companies, including the Metalúrgica Mexicana subsidiary of American Smelting and Refining Company (ASARCO) beginning in 1928.[3] A miners' strike occurred in 1948 for improved conditions and pay, but the miners lost. ASARCO decided to leave, but not before destructively collapsing the main shafts and tunnels, though the mines were never declared exhausted. Canadian mining company Metallica Resources acquired the mines in the latter 20th century.
The mines were acquired by Canadian New Gold Inc., through the Mexican subsidiary Minera San Xavier (MSX), from Metallica Resources in 1997.[2][3][4]
Open pit mine[]
In 1999, after notable local and national opposition and assassinated opponents, the Cerro de San Pedro Mine was restarted for gold mining by New Gold/MSX, though as an open pit mine instead of using underground methods.[2][5] There was/is significant opposition because the open pit would be/is in an area that was declared an area of colonial monuments in 1972 as well as a wildlife preservation zone in 1993.[5][6]
In 1997, MSX had received an authorization from local authorities to start the mining project.[7] In 1999, the Mexican Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) granted MSX an environmental permit to conduct mining operations.[5] After MSX was granted the mining permits, an ongoing legal struggle between MSX and diverse groups opposing the project started (est. 2003).[2]
In March 2004, the Unitary Agrarian Tribunal rejected the lease MSX had been using since 1999 to operate in ejidal lands because they had used falsified signatures.[2] Then in 2004, the National Defense Secretariat gave MSX authorization to use of explosives, which violated a previous decree issued by the Second District Court. Then in 2004, the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) presented a lawsuit against MSX, stating that historical monuments had been damaged by the new use of explosives.[2][7] The nearby central historic district of the city of San Luis de Potosí is part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Finally in 2004, the Supreme Tribunal of Fiscal and Administrative Justice cancelled the environmental permit granted to MSX by the SEMARNAT in 1999, ruling that a permit never should have been granted.[7] MSX requested an appeal and continued to operate.[5] In 2005 the appeal was rejected and the Supreme Tribunal ratified the cancellation of the environmental permit. The mine was closed.[2]
In 2006, after president Vicente Fox publicly announced his support for MSX, the Mexican government granted them a new environmental permit.[2][7] In 2010 the Supreme Tribunal nullified the permit granted to MSX in 2006 and the Environment Federal Agency (PROFEPA) closed the mine for the second time.[8][9][10] In September 2009 the Mexican Federal Tribunal of Administrative and Fiscal Justice unequivocally declared the 2006 environmental Change of Land Use permit necessary to operate the mine “null and void.".[9] In a November 2009 press release, [ MSX−New Gold Inc: 2 November press release MSX misinformed the shareholders and public it had filed an appeal.[9]
In late 2010 the SEMARNAT issued MSX a new permit, despite strong local opposition, and the mine began operating again.[2][8] 25 tons of explosives are detonated daily, and the namesake hill, Cerro de San Pedro, no longer exists.[2][11][12]
Cerro de San Pedro Municipality[]
Towns[]
The villages and colonias in the Cerro de San Pedro Municipality include:
- Cerro de San Pedro (Cabecera Municipal, municipal seat)
- Portezuelo
- Real del Potosi
- Monte De Caldera
- Cuesta de Campa
- La Zapatilla
- Divisadero
- Calderon
- Jesus Maria
- Joyita de la Cruz
- La Florida
- Granjas de San Pedro
- Granjas de la Florida
- Planta del Carmen
References[]
- ^ Instituto Nacional de Estadistica y Geografia (2005). "Cerro de San Pedro, San Luis Potosi". Retrieved 6 April 2009.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k MICLA: Minera San Xavier (MSX) Cerro de San Pedro open pit mine history; McGill University Research Group Investigating Canadian Mining in Latin America (MICLA) 2014 Report; accessed 7.27.2015
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f FAO—Fruente Amplio Opisitor: Cerro de San Pedro Historia . accessed 7.17.2015 (Spanish).
- ^ NewGold.com: Cerro San Pedro operations . accessed 7.17.2015
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Jaime Aviles, “Minera San Xavier, catastrofe para SLP”, La Jornada, November 14, 2011.
- ^ FAO—Fruente Amplio Opisitor website: Homepage (Spanish); Consortium of public & scientific groups, and govt. environmental & cultural heritage entities, opposing MSX mining practices at Cerro de San Pedro and the resulting cultural/environmental degradation.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Metrostudies.berkeley.edu: “Cerro de San Pedro: Grass Roots Movements in Cooperation and Conflict to Stop a Living City from Disappearing” Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine; by Jose G. Vargas-Hernandez; paper presented at the Seventh International Critical Management Studies Conference, Naples Italy, 14–16 July 2011.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Environmental Justice Atlas.org: “Cerro de San Pedro mine, San Luis Potosí, México”; by Patricia Chavez; October 28, 2014.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c MiningWatch.ca: "Canadian Company Accused of Disobeying Court, Misleading Shareholders - Citizens’ group argues New Gold violated disclosure rules in a complaint lodged with BC Securities Commission" Archived March 15, 2012, at the Wayback Machine; 10 November 2009.
- ^ Complaint to British Columbia Securities Commission re: New Gold & Cerro de San Pedro Mine shareholders misinformation[permanent dead link]; 9 November 2009.
- ^ Google Maps: satellite view of Cerro de San Pedro, with open pit mine impacts in 2015.
- ^ Jornada.unam.mx: Frente Amplio Opositor a la Minera San Xavier/REMA, “Cerro de San Pedro: Breve Reseña de sus Luchas”; April 20, 2013.
Bibliography[]
- Upsidedownworld.org: “Canadian Mining Crimes in Mexico”; by Juan Carlos Ruiz Guadalajara; July 21, 2010.
- Jornada.unam.mx: Frente Amplio Opositor a la Minera San Xavier/REMA, “Cerro de San Pedro: Breve Reseña de sus Luchas”; April 20, 2013.
- Gold mines in Mexico
- Silver mines in Mexico
- History of San Luis Potosí
- Mining communities in Mexico
- Mining disasters in Mexico
- Municipalities of San Luis Potosí
- 1583 in Mexico
- 1592 establishments in New Spain
- 1592 in Mexico
- Populated places established in 1592
- Silver mining in the Spanish Empire