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In Venezuela: Trying To Map Out Blueprint For Lost City

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Bianca
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« on: February 26, 2009, 02:46:27 pm »



Meridith Kohut
for The New York Times

Scholars and archaeologists occasionally drop by the ruins of Nueva Cádiz for a glimpse into the dawn of the Spanish conquest.
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« Reply #1 on: February 26, 2009, 02:53:42 pm »










                                 In Venezuela, Trying to Map Out Blueprint for Lost City
   




         
SIMON ROMERO
Cabagua Journal
February 24, 2009
CUBAGUA,
Venezuela

— The first living things to greet a visitor on this desert island are the dogs. More than a dozen roam through the ruins of Nueva Cádiz, as if signaling that the city that flourished here five centuries ago at the start of the European conquest belongs to them now.

Amid their howling, a weathered sign next to a garbage pile briefly describes the rise and fall of Nueva Cádiz, by 1515 a slaving center and the flash point for Latin America’s first frenzied commodities boom, built around pearls. By 1541, the sign says, “The depleted oyster beds put a final end to the city.”

So it went for Cubagua. Before the conquistador Hernán Cortés plundered the riches of Mexico’s Aztec empire, Spain established a thriving outpost here on one of the Lesser Antilles’s most desolate islands, which is so dry that water supplies have to be imported from the mainland and nearby islands (as they were for Nueva Cádiz).

Spanish officials sent the enslaved here and killed off Caribbean ethnic groups, like the Lucayans brought from the Bahamas as pearl divers. The Spanish laid out avenues and built an imposing city of limestone that was intended to serve as a base for conquering the rest of South America. Then, suddenly, they abandoned it.

Nueva Cádiz is now largely forgotten, even in Venezuela.

Scholars occasionally drop by for a glimpse into the dawn of the Spanish conquest, and archaeologists sometimes obtain permits to dig here. Otherwise Cubagua’s ruins, which might rank among the most important post-Columbian archaeological sites in the Americas, are a lost city — in effect, if not in name.

“To this day I do not understand why anyone would build a city here,” said Enrique Suárez, 60, a fisherman who lives in a house built of driftwood and discarded tin on the edge of the ruins.

Left vulnerable to the elements and mainland looters, the city’s walls now stand no more than a few feet high. A concrete historical marker erected in the early 1990s lies ravaged by vandals.

Cubagua’s entire population today numbers fewer than 100, all of them fishermen like Mr. Suárez and their families. They live on what they catch, in Mr. Suárez’s case on a recent morning a stingray that he was drying in the scorching sun. Later, he said he would prepare the stingray with some salt and garlic.

For diversion, he raises fighting cocks and feeds some of the feral dogs. Apart from his small boat, his only mainland tie seemed to be a red flag on his roof emblazoned with the letters P.S.U.V. — the initials of President Hugo Chávez’s Socialist party and a symbol of a revolution that has not yet arrived in Cubagua.

“We are living in almost complete solitude out here,” Mr. Suárez said, “and that is the way we like it.”
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« Reply #2 on: February 26, 2009, 02:59:45 pm »



The New York Times

Nueva Cádiz was the hub of
a commodities boom by 1515.










Archaeologists occasionally disrupt this idyll. Last year, a team led by a Venezuelan, Jorge Armand, disembarked here and found shrubs and garbage covering the ruins. The fishermen were using the ruins of Nueva Cádiz as an open air outhouse, Mr. Armand said.

“Here was a city built by the Spanish to last five centuries, and today it is hardly even on the margins of our consciousness,” Mr. Armand said. “Paradoxically, thanks to this neglect, the ruins have been more or less preserved.”

Before Mr. Chávez rose to power a decade ago, developers planned to build one of the Caribbean’s largest resort complexes on Cubagua, with 8,000 hotel rooms, two aquariums, a highway system, two 18-hole golf courses and a desalination plant to provide fresh water. But opposition from environmentalists and historians scuttled the project.

About two years ago, Mr. Chávez’s government unveiled its own plan to develop Cubagua, roughly a 10-square-mile outcrop. It called for a small port, a museum, a school and a health clinic, and for the fishermen to be trained so they could go to work in tourism cooperatives.

But money for the project vanished from the Institute of Cultural Patrimony, according to published reports in Caracas. Mr. Armand called in January for a federal investigation into claims of corruption surrounding the project.
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« Reply #3 on: February 26, 2009, 03:05:52 pm »



Meridith Kohut
for The New York Times

Tourists snorkeled amid wreckage off the island of Cubagua,
a 10-square-mile outcrop in the Caribbean.
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« Reply #4 on: February 26, 2009, 03:10:06 pm »









The wait for justice in Venezuela can take years, decades, perhaps longer. Meanwhile, Cubagua still beckons to the occasional wayfarer, like Peter Muilenburg, who wrote an account in the 1990s of the island’s place in Caribbean history, describing its “anarchy, greed, and wealth.”

Stephen G. Bloom, an American who is publishing a history of pearls this year titled “Tears of Mermaids,” traveled to Cubagua in 2008.

“There were a bunch of wild dogs guarding something of amazingly valuable historical importance,” said Mr. Bloom. “I found it immensely sad.”

Archaeologists and economic historians also see a parable for today’s oil-rich Venezuela.

Nueva Cádiz exploded as a New World epicenter for commodity exploitation, and fell just as quickly when the population of oysters in its hammerhead-infested waters crashed after just a few decades.

“Will other areas of Venezuela resemble Cubagua when the oil industry disappears?” asked Mr. Armand, the archaeologist.

Skeptics counter that it is far too early to even pose such a question. Venezuela, after all, boasts some of the largest oil reserves outside the Middle East.

But even that bounty may not shield complex oil projects from obsolescence someday. Competition from new energy technologies moves forward. Abrupt shifts in the global economy whipsaw different industries. As a former Saudi oil minister once put it, the Stone Age did not end because we ran out of stones.

The pearl industry’s evolution points to one possible outcome. Even today, Cubagua’s fishermen still find tiny pearls in oysters. But even if these pearls resemble the gems once lusted after by European royalty, they are nearly worthless compared with the gumball-size pearls now cultivated in Asia.

“The oyster’s meat is now worth more than its pearl,” said Cornelio Marcano, 37, a fisherman who lives on Cubagua. “After all, what is more important?” he asked. “Food for one’s belly or a pearl?”




RETRIEVED FROM

The New York Times
Feb. 24, 2009
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« Reply #5 on: February 26, 2009, 03:22:03 pm »

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« Reply #6 on: February 26, 2009, 03:26:21 pm »

 


         
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« Reply #7 on: February 26, 2009, 03:31:01 pm »









Cubagua or Isla de Cubagua is the smallest and least populated of the three islands constituting the Venezuelan state of Nueva Esparta, after Isla Margarita and Coche.

It is located 16 km north of Araya Peninsula, the closest mainland area.
 


The island is 9.2 by 3.6 km in size, an elliptical shape with the longer axis east-west.

Its area is 22.438 km².

The coast consists of cliffs from five to seven meters high in the south, and from 20 to 24 meters high in the north, but there are also some beaches.

The highest elevation of the flat-topped island reaches 32 meters.



It is dry and lacks surface water bodies (the only freshwater is found in small underground reservoirs).

Annual precipitation is 250 mm, which is the value of a dry desert.

Temperatures are close to 25°C year-round, with little fluctuation.



The desert-like (xerophytic) vegetation of the essentially barren island includes a number of Cactaceae such as cardón de dato (Ritterocereus griseus), buche, melón de cerro, sabana o monte (Melocactus caesius), guamacho (Pereskia guamacho), and Opuntia tuna,

as well as a few legumes, including members of the family Fabaceae such as yaque, cuj‚ or honey mesquite (Prosopis juliflora), guatapamare or dividivi (Caesalpinia coriaria), poorman’s friend (Stylosanthes viscosa),

and the Euphorbiaceae sangre drago (Croton flavens).



The island has small populations of hares and feral goats.



There are no streets or roads on the island.

Cubagua is served by ferries and other boats from Punta de Piedras, the capital of Tubores municipality, located eight kilometers to the northeast, on Isla Margarita. The passage takes less than two hours.

The boat landing pier is located at the eastern end of Playa Charagato, the main settlement of Cubagua.

There is a lighthouse marking Punta Charagato in the northeast (which the ferry from Isla Margarita passes), and another one at Punta Brasil in the northwest, to aid the ferries from Punta de Piedras to Puerto la Cruz that pass by Cubagua on the west.
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« Reply #8 on: February 26, 2009, 03:33:12 pm »

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« Reply #9 on: February 26, 2009, 03:35:11 pm »








The first human settlement on Cubagua has been dated to 2325 B.C., a time within the Meso-Indian Period (5000 to 1000 B.C.).

Human activity dates from the 24th century BC, but the first people did not settle here in a permanent fashion. Instead the island was used as a source of oysters, for food, and for pearls. The lack of vegetation or fresh water made permanent settlement nearly impossible.

Cubagua was discovered for Europeans by Christopher Columbus in 1498.

Its historically most important resources have been the pearls of pearl oysters, already in pre-European times.

The peak of its exploitation occurred from 1508 to 1520. By 1531 signs of resource exhaustion became evident. Between 1530 and 1535 fishing resources were exploited at peak level, to support a growing population.

In 1528, Cristóbal Guerra founded the city "La Villa de la Nueva Cádiz", the first Spanish settlement in Venezuela, and one of the first ones in the Americas. 

The city became a synonym for the suppression by the Hispanic Conquistadores in South America. 

Nueva Cádiz, which reached a population between 1000 and 1500, was destroyed in an earthquake in 1541.

 The ruins have been declared a National Monument of Venezuela in 1979.
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« Reply #10 on: February 26, 2009, 03:41:24 pm »



Ruins of Nueva Cadiz
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« Reply #11 on: February 26, 2009, 03:46:25 pm »








Cubagua is part of the municipality of Tubores, one of eleven municipalities of the state
of Nueva Esparta.

Today the island still has temporary fisherman, but few to no permanent residents.

According to an unofficial census of population by the Instituto del Patrimonio Cultural
in August 2007, the island had a population of 51, of which 19 were children.

This population resides in four sub-communities in the northeast of the island,
from west to east:



Playa Falucho

Playa Charagato (the largest settlement)

Punta Charagato

Punta la Cabecera (close to the ruins Nueva Cádiz)



In addition, on some maps a settlement called Punta Arenas appears in the southwest.

Satellite images reveal about five buildings at that site. A small settlement of about four
buildings can be made out about midway between Punta La Horca (the westernmost point
of Cubagua) and Punta Arenas, south of Punta El Lamparo. Two buildings can be seen on
the southern bay of Manglecito, just east of Punta Manglecito.

If the itinerant fishermen from the rest of Nueva Esparta from the Venezuelan mainland
(State of Sucre) are included, the population exceeds 300 during the year.



Coordinates: 10°49′08″N 64°10′57″W / 10.81889°N 64.1825°W / 10.81889; -64.1825






Reference



^ A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels By Robert Kerr

^ a b Venezuela By Leonard Victor Dalton

^ Universidad Nueva Esparta

^ Cubagua's Pearl-Oyster Beds






External links



Information about Cubagua Island (Spanish)

detailed map (Geology)

nautical description



Retrieved from

"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubagua"

Category:
Islands of Venezuela
« Last Edit: February 26, 2009, 03:47:22 pm by Bianca » Report Spam   Logged

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« Reply #12 on: February 26, 2009, 03:57:50 pm »

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« Reply #13 on: February 26, 2009, 04:00:49 pm »








                                         RUINS OF NUEVA CADIZ - CUBAGUA ISLAND





                                                           
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« Reply #14 on: February 26, 2009, 04:16:20 pm »




                                       
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