Publication presents a social and environmental vision of the greatest black water basin in the world, with a length of approximately 70 million hectares, and shared by four countries: Brazil, Colombia, Guyana and Venezuela.
Submitted news
15 May 2015 at 16:54 (Updated on 14 September 2020 at 11:54)
There are no comments yet. Leave a comment!
Related Posts
Belo Monte will remove 2,000 families in two months in Altamira
February 26, 2015
To circumvent delays and obey the new Belo Monte plant’s construction schedule, Norte Energia dealership will remove in the next two months more than 2,000 families of the areas that will be flooded.
Phys.org: Satellite technology shows Amazon absorbing less carbon due to less rainfall
October 29, 2014
The forest that remains is receiving less rain, which in turn is making it less green which means the trees that are there are pulling in less carbon dioxide from the air around them.
CBS News: Amazon's biggest fish faces threat of extinction
August 15, 2014
A recent survey of fishing communities in the state of Amazonas, Brazil, found that the arapaima is already extinct in some parts of the Amazon basin. In other parts of the Amazon, its numbers are rapidly dwindling.