A Pemon indigenous porter holds a light as he walks on the top of Roraima Mount, near Venezuela’s border with Brazil

A Pemon indigenous porter holds a light as he walks on the top of Roraima Mount, near Venezuela’s border with Brazil

A Pemon indigenous porter holds a light as he walks on the top of Roraima Mount, near Venezuela’s border with Brazil January 16, 2015. A mysterious table-topped mountain on the Venezuela-Brazil border that perplexed 19th century explorers and inspired “The Lost World” novel is attracting ever more modern-day adventurers. Once impenetrable to all but the local Pemon indigenous people, now several thousand trekkers a year make the six-day hike across Venezuela’s savannah, through rivers, and up a narrow path that scales Mount Roraima’s 600-meter cliff-faces. While that is a help to Venezuela’s tottering tourism industry and brings revenues to local communities, it is also scattering a prehistoric landscape with unwanted litter. Picture taken using a long exposure. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins (VENEZUELA – Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY)

ATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 10 OF 16 FOR WIDER IMAGE PACKAGE ‘DISCOVERING VENEZUELA’S LOST WORLD’





TO FIND ALL IMAGES SEARCH ‘RORAIMA’