Incredible photos show what it's like to live in the highest inhabited town on Earth, 16,000 feet ab

October 2024 · 4 minute read

La Rinconada is the highest human habitation in the world, and it is home to some of the most brutal living conditions known to man. It's also an unregulated goldmine.

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At a height of over 16,000 feet, it's a place where only the hardest can carve a living. About 30,000 people live in the settlement, perched atop Mount Ananea in the Peruvian Andes. It spends much of the year in sub-zero temperatures.

This is what it's like to spend your life above the clouds.

The photos in this article were provided by Walker Dawson. You can check out more of his work on his Facebook page or email him at walkermanchesterdawson@gmail.com.

La Rinconada is one of the most isolated communities in the world.

Walker Dawson

The settlement was built at an astonishing height of 16,700 feet and lies in the shadow of Bella Durmiente — or Sleeping Beauty — an enormous glacier that lurks over the town.

Walker Dawson

The town is accessible only by braving a precarious mountainside road covered in grass, rocks, dirt, and often ice. The journey can take several days.

La Rinconada. Walker Dawson

Tourists avoid the town, which has no hotels or hospitals, and the government has little to no presence in the town.

Walker Dawson

The air in La Rinconada is difficult to breathe for tourists and other outsiders. At such a great altitude, the air is dangerously thin. This is because gravity holds oxygen close to the surface of Earth, and people begin feeling altitude sickness at around 10,000 feet. Residents of La Rinconada have adapted to the harsh conditions.

La Rinconada. Walker Dawson

The town is extremely poor, but its residents are hardened. The town’s economy relies almost entirely upon the unregulated gold mines carved into the surrounding mountain-face.

Walker Dawson

Between 2001 and 2009, the price of gold rose 235%. As the price skyrocketed, so too did the population — to over 30,000 people. With gold showing no signs of slowing down, the population grew to about 50,000 people by 2012.

Walker Dawson

Much of the population is made up of optimistic Peruvians who fancied their luck striking it rich in the gold mines. Miners here don't receive a traditional paycheck. Instead, they can lay claim to any gold they find on the last day of each month.

Walker Dawson

Gold has been mined in the Andes for centuries, with mining activity dating as far back as the Incas. People in La Rinconada hike for 30 minutes every day to reach the mines, which are filled with hazardous gasses, mercury, cyanide, and a lack of oxygen.

Walker Dawson

Women aren’t allowed to enter the mines, so they do the outdoor work. This woman is creating the metal parts required to prop up the mining tunnels.

Walker Dawson

Those who founded the small mining camp never anticipated the population to grow to the size it did, and thus its infrastructure is almost nonexistent​.

Walker Dawson

The town has no running water, and building a sewage system has proved impossible. Waste disposal is the responsibility of residents.

Walker Dawson

Some people choose to burn their rubbish or bury it outside the town.

Walker Dawson

Others simply toss it wherever there is space.

Walker Dawson

The lack of sanitation and the unregulated mining operations mean the ground in La Rinconada is heavily contaminated with mercury, resulting in many of the residents suffering from mercury poisoning, which affects​ the nervous system and causes itching, burning, and skin discoloration.

La Rinconada Walker Dawson

Locals have to find old-fashioned ways of entertaining themselves and often meet in cafés built for the miners. This picture taken by Walker Dawson shows the local soccer team put together by the miners.

Walker dawson

The lake you see in the background of this picture is also heavily contaminated with mercury and cyanide, which flows through the town.

Walker Dawson

Following his visit, photographer Dawson told Business Insider in 2015 that La Rinconada was a startling exhibit of the extreme lengths people will go in search of wealth and a better life.

Walker Dawson
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