124:, have a common narrative that their elders tell about the Nhamini-wi, which that led west to the "house of the night." The house was so called because that is where the sun disappeared for several days, leaving the people in total darkness. Large groups of soldiers traveled this road carrying loads of baskets filled with “insects of gold”. It is said that they would take them to the mountains to be given as gifts to the Gods so as not to darken the sun again. But opening these baskets before they arrived would cause the sun to leave. Many tribes’ narratives say that some of the baskets were opened and the resulting darkness caused the trail to never be used again. The Tukano tribe says that the trail began at
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160:. In 1977 artist and explorer Roland Stevenson traveled up the Rio Negro in search of the same stone ruins. Led by indigenous guides he found old and collapsed stone walls that were dotted every twenty kilometers along an east to western line.
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is, according to indigenous oral history, an ancient trail leading from the
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The existence of the
Nhamini-wi supports theories of the existence of
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Information about the new expeditions from for El Dorado
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wrote about ruins that existed in the forests north of
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Stevenson, Roland. Uma Luz nos Mistérios Amazônicos.
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152:. 19th century Brazilian writer
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237:Road transport in South America
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209:Interview with Roland Stevenson
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193:: SUFRAMA, 1994.
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