Tambopata River

Most of the Tambopata is in the Madre de Dios and Puno regions in Peru, but the upper parts of the river forms the border between Peru and Bolivia, and its origin is in La Paz department in Bolivia.

The Tambopata is a tributary of the Madre de Dios River, into which it merges at the city of Puerto Maldonado.

[3] These companies were granted concessions by the government of Peru to develop land routes through the isthmus of Fitzcarrald.

Lucien J. Jerome, a British Consul in Callao at the time referred to the treatment of the indigenous in the Madre de Dios as “slavery pure and simple.”[3]

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