
Amazon River basin
The 'Amazon Basin' is the part of
South America drained by the
Amazon River and its tributaries.
Geographic studies
The Amazon river basin is located mainly (50%) in
Brazil, but also stretches into
Peru and several other countries. The South American
rain forest of the Amazon is the largest in the world, covering about 8,235,430 sq km with dense tropical forest. For centuries, this has protected the area and the animals residing in it.
Plant life
Not all of the plant and animal life of the Amazon is known because of its hugely unexplored areas. No one knows how many species of fish there are in the river. Dense plant growth occurs because rainfall and regrowth of leaves occur gradually throughout each year. There is a huge diversity of tree species, but trees of the Amazon usually have smooth, straight trunks and large leaves.
Amazonian indigenous peoples
The Amazon Basin includes a diversity of traditional inhabitants as well as biodiversity in both flora and fauna. These peoples have lived in the rain forest for thousands of years, and their lifestyles and cultures are well-adapted to this environment. Contrary to popular belief, their subsistence living methods do not significantly harm the environment. In the past few decades, the real threat to the Amazon Basin has been deforestation and cattle ranching by large transnational corporations. People that live here also consume an extremely small amount of energy generated by plants and primary producers. Their energy-use percentage in the world is nearly zero. This is potentially helpful to the environment.
History
The Amazon basin has been continuously inhabited for more than 12,000 years, since the first proven arrivals of people in South America. Those peoples, when found by European explorers in the 16th century, were scattered in hundreds of small tribes with no writing system except for the part ruled by the Inca Empire. Perhaps as many as 90% of the inhabitants died due to European diseases within the first hundred years of contact, many tribes perished even before direct contact with Europeans, as their germs traveled faster than explorers, contaminating village after village.
Upon the European discovery of America, the Portuguese and the Spanish signed the
Treaty of Tordesillas, dividing the country into a large Spanish western part, which encompassed all of the then unknown North America and Central America, and western South America, the Portuguese had Eastern South America, what would become modern eastern Brazil.
By the late 17th century Portuguese/Brazilian explorers had dominated much of the Amazon basin because the mouth of the
Amazon river lay within the Portuguese side, as well as the Brazilian inward exploration ventures such as the
Bandeiras, which originated in
São Paulo and conquered much of what is today central Brazil (states of Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Goiás) and then proceeded to the Amazon. In 1750 the
Treaty of Madrid certified the transfer of most of the Amazon basin and the region of
Mato Grosso to the Portuguese side, hugely contributing to the continental size of what is now Brazil.
Brazilian
General Rondon is also reckoned as a major 19th century explorer of the Amazon as well as a defender of its native peoples, the Brazilian state of
Rondônia is named after him.
In 1903 Brazil bought a large portion of northern
Bolivia and made it its current state of Acre. In 2006 the new socialist Bolivian president
Evo Morales talked about "getting it back. The Brazilians got it for the price of a horse". No action was taken and the two nations remain friendly. In the late 19th century, a US-Brazilian joint venture failed to implement the
Madeira-Mamoré railway, in the state of
Rondônia, with a huge cost in money and lives.
Intense deforestation began in the second half of the
20th century, population growth and development plans such as the failed Brazilian
Trans-Amazonian Highway. In the late 1980s the Brazilian
Chico Mendes, who lived in
Acre, became internationally famous for his passionate defense of the forest and its people, especially after he was shot to death by farmers whose interests he harmed.
Demographics
The Amazon basin is inhabited by roughly 26 million people, of which 11 million on the Brazilian side. The two largest cities in the Amazon basin are
Manaus (1.4 million, the capital of the Brazilian state of Amazonas) and
Belém (1 million, capital of the Brazilian state of Pará).
Cities
Amazonia is not heavily populated. There are a few
cities along the Amazon's banks, such as
Iquitos,
Peru and scattered settlements inland, but most of the population lives in cities, such as
Manaus in
Brazil. In many regions, the forest has been cleared for
soy bean plantations and
ranching (the most extensive non-forest use of the land) and some of the inhabitants harvest wild
rubber latex and
Brazil nuts. This is a form of extractive farms, where the trees are not cut down, and thus this is a relatively sustainable human impact.
The land
The Amazon basin is bounded by the
Guiana highlands in the north and the Brazilian highlands in the south. The Amazon, which rises in the
Andes Mountains at the west of the basin, is the second largest river in the world. It covers a distance of about 6,400 km before draining into the
Atlantic Ocean. The Amazon and its tributaries form the largest volume of water. The Amazon accounts for about 20% of the total water carried to the oceans by rivers.
Languages
The most widely spoken language in the Amazon is
Portuguese, followed closely by
Spanish. On the
Brazilian side Portuguese is spoken by at least 98% of the population, whilst in the Spanish-speaking countries there can still be found a large amount of speakers of Native American languages, though Spanish easily predominates.
There are hundreds of native languages still spoken in the Amazon, most of which are spoken by only a handful of people, and thus seriously endangered. One of the most widely spoken languages in the Amazon is
Reengage, which is actually descended from the ancient
Tupi language, originally spoken in coastal and central regions of Brazil, and brought to its present location along the
Rio Negro by Brazilian colonizers, which until the mid-18th century used Tupi more than the official Portuguese to communicate. Other than modern Reengage, other languages of the Tupi Family are spoken there, along with other language families like
Jê (with its important subbranch
Jayapura spoken in the
Xingu River region and others),
Arawak,
Karib,
Arawá,
Yanomamo,
Matsés and others.
French, Spanish, and Portuguese are all similar to and derived from Latin.
Economy
Most people in the Amazon region live off
fishing and basic
agriculture, and especially in the southern part of the Brazilian side, cattle herding, which is extremely destructive of the forest. One important exception is the
Zona Franca de Manaus (Free Zone of Manaus), created by the
Brazilian government in the 1970s to implement light industries in the region, mostly electronics and motorcycles. Contrary to what might be believed, this light industrialization is very little pollutive and actually, according to some environmentalists, has helped save the rainforest around
Manaus by creating job opportunities and education, thus driving people away from the heavily damaging subsistence and
slash-and-burn agriculture.
External links
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Bibliography on Water Resources and International Law See 'Amazon River'. Peace Palace Library]
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Save the Amazon rainforest
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Information and a map of the Amazon's watershed
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The Amazon basin : Fluvial ecosystems - Wetlands - Fluvial dynamics - Economic importance - An uncertain future (french)
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Amazon biogeography (French, English, Spanish)
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Amazon Alliance-For Indigenous and Traditional Peoples of the Amazon Basin (English, Spanish)
Dense plant growth because the rainfall and regrowth of leaves occur gradually throughout each year. Huge Diversity of tree species but usually have smooth, straight trunks and large leaves.
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/ Herndon and Gibbon Lieutenants United States Navy The First North American Explorers of the Amazon Valley, by Historian Normand E. Klare. Actual Reports from the explorers are compared with present Amazon Basin conditions.