Putumayo

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('tə-mī'ō, -tū-mä') pronunciation

A river of northwest South America rising in southwest Colombia and flowing about 1,609 km (1,000 mi) along the Colombia-Peru border to the Amazon River in northwest Brazil.

Putumayo (pūtūmä') or Içá (ēsä'), river, c.1,000 mi (1,600 km) long, rising in the Andes, S Colombia, and flowing SE to the Amazon in NW Brazil. Mostly navigable, it marks part of Colombia's boundary with Ecuador and most of Colombia's frontier with Peru. The river valley, once a major source of rubber, has declined somewhat in economic importance, but rubber and balatá are shipped to Manaus, Brazil. In the early 20th cent., during the peak of the wild-rubber bonanza, Roger Casement, a British consul, was appointed to head a group to investigate the treatment of Native American laborers in the region and made a report for the Peruvian government on the brutal exploitation of native labor; the report shocked the world.


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Mentioned in

Putumayo Presents: Mexico (2001 Album by Various Artists)
Travel the World With Putumayo (2004 Music Film)
Putumayo Presents: African Reggae (2009 Album by Various Artists)
Putumayo Presents: World Party (2007 Album by Various Artists)
Travel the World with Putumayo (1997 Album by Various Artists)