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Rubber tapping in the forest was once the main Amazonian economic activity, and now an Indigenous group is bringing it back.
Tropical trees are dying faster than ever, and it's not just heat or drought to blame. Scientists have uncovered a surprising ...
New research reveals that thunderstorms - not just drought or heat - are a major cause of rising tree deaths in tropical ...
When a massive tree toppled in the floodplains of Fonte Boa, a region in the Brazilian Amazon, local fishermen noticed ...
A patch of degraded forest the size of a soccer field is home to the world’s longest-running experiment simulating ...
In early February, in downtown Bogotá, Colombia, Luis Alfredo Acosta recited a line in a book from memory: “I am from the ...
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AZ Animals on MSNThe 10 Largest Snake Species You’ll Find in South AmericaSouth America is home to a diverse amount of wildlife. From the Amazon rainforest to the arid deserts of Chile, South America ...
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Live Science on MSNIndigenous funeral urns discovered on human-made islands in Amazon rainforestGiant ceramic pots made centuries to millennia ago were found to hold human bones, while others held a mixture of seeds and ...
Today, at the Living Planet Symposium, ESA revealed the first stunning images from its Biomass satellite mission—marking a ...
The preservation push in Ecuador comes as another South American country that includes part of the Amazon rainforest, Brazil, is moving ahead with plans to further develop oil resources.
Their visit to California helped prompt the state Senate to introduce a landmark resolution urging officials to examine the state’s role in importing crude from the Amazon. The move comes as ...
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