AMAZON, River, Peru and Brazil

Port. Amazonasämäzōˈnəs, world's second longest river, c.3,900 mi (6,280 km) long, formed by the junction in N Peru's Andes Mts. of two major headstreams, the Ucayali and the shorter Marañón. It flows across N Brazil before entering the Atlantic Ocean near Belém.

The Amazon carries more water than any other river in the world. The drainage basin is enormous (c.2,500,000 sq mi/6,475,000 sq km; c.35% of South America), gathering waters from both hemispheres and covering not only most of N Brazil but also parts of Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela. For most of its course the river has an average depth of c.150 ft (50 m). The gradient of the river is very low: Manaus, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) upstream, is only c.100 ft (30 m) higher than Belém and is an ocean port; ships with a draft of 14 ft (4 m) can reach Iquitos, Peru, c.2,300 mi (3,700 km) from the sea. Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia have international shipping rights on the Amazon. In the lowlands stretching east from the Andes is the largest rain forest (selva) in the world—a wet, green land rich in plant life. The tropical climate is tempered by the heavy rainfall (exceeding 150 in./381 cm annually in parts of the upper and lower regions) and by high relative humidity; the average temperature at Santarém, 400 mi (644 km) upriver, is 78 degrees Fahrenheit (26 degrees Celsius).

Course

Geologically, the Amazon basin is a sediment-filled structural depression between crystalline highlands of Brazil and Guiana. The riverbed (1–8 mi/1.6–12.9 km wide) is in a wide floodplain that is up to 30 mi (48 km) wide. For much of its course, the Amazon wanders in a maze of brownish channels amid countless islands, but is unobstructed by falls.

Its headstreams, however, arise cold and clear in the heights of the Andes. They descend northward before turning east to join and form the Amazon (which is, however, occasionally called the Solimões from the Brazilian border to the junction with the Rio Negro). Of the Amazon's more than 500 tributaries, the chief ones are the Negro, Japurá (Caquetá), Putumayo (Içá), and Napo, which enter from the north; and the Javari, Juruá, Purús, Madeira, Tapajós, and Xingú rivers, which enter from the south. The Casiquiare River, a natural canal, links the Amazon basin (through the Rio Negro) with the Orinoco basin.

Below the Xingú the river reaches its delta, with many islands formed by alluvial deposit and submergence of the land. Around the largest of these, Marajó, the river splits into two large streams. The northern stream is the principal outlet and threads its way around many islands. The southern channel, called the Pará River, receives the Tocantins River and has the important port of Belém. The awesome tidal bore (up to 12 ft/3.7 m high) of the Amazon is called pororoca; it travels c.500 mi (800 km) upstream. The river's immense silt-laden discharge is visible far out to sea.

Exploration and Development

The Amazon was probably first seen by Europeans in 1500 when the Spanish commander Vicente Yáñez Pinzón explored the lower part. Real exploration of the river came with the voyage of the Spanish explorer Francisco de Orellana down from the Napo in 1540–41; his fanciful stories of female warriors gave the river its name. Not long afterward (1559) the Spanish conquistador Pedro de Ursúa led an expedition down from the Marañón River. In 1637–38 the Portuguese explorer Pedro Teixeira led the voyage upstream that definitively opened the Amazon to world knowledge. The river continued to be of enormous importance to explorers and naturalists, among them Charles Darwin and Louis Agassiz.

There is archaeological evidence of clustered, densely populated pre-Colombian settlements in parts of the Amazon basin, but at the time of the early European explorations these settlements had already been wiped out, probably by smallpox and other diseases, The valley was largely left to its sparse remaining indigenous inhabitants (mostly groups of the Guaraní-Tupi linguistic stock and of meager material culture) until the mid-19th cent., when steamship service was regularly established on the river and when some settlements were made. In the late 19th and early 20th cent., the brief wild-rubber boom on the upper Amazon attracted settlers from Brazil's northeastern states, and in the 1930s Japanese immigrants began developing jute and pepper plantations. Until recently the area remained largely unpopulated, yielding small quantities of forest products (rubber, timber, vegetable oils, Brazil nuts, and medicinal plants) and cacao. Extensive road networks are now opening these lands to colonization, although agricultural success has been limited by adverse climate, poor soils, and great market distances.

The establishment of a health service (chiefly by launch) in World War II was followed by the creation of a UNESCO research institute in 1948, and several developmental programs, both governmental and private, were set up in Brazil to foster the valley's development. In the 1960s the Amazon region began experiencing increased economic development brought on by tax incentives and construction of the Trans-Amazon Highway, the Belém-Brasília Highway, and two rail lines. Near Manaus and Amapá, factories make use of ample oil and manganese resources. In addition, a port at the Brazilian city of Macapá was connected by rail in the 1950s to the inland stores of manganese.

The Brazilian government implemented a "poles of development" policy in 1974 to plan for population increase. Since 1985 the Carajás project, centered in W Maranhão, has seen the development of major iron ore deposits, the construction of a new railroad, and the initiation of forest clearance, land colonization, cattle ranching, large-scale farming, and urban development on an unprecedented scale. This policy has had mixed results, leading to environmental damage and to the disruption of the original inhabitants' lives. Large sections of the rain forest have been destroyed in recent years, threatening rare species of plants and contributing to the increase in the atmosphere's carbon dioxide and the consequent impact on global warming.

Bibliography

See C. R. Marham, ed., Expeditions into the Valley of the Amazon (1859); R. Furneaux, The Amazon (1969); J. R. Holland, The Amazon (1972); B. Weinstein, Amazon Rubber Boom, 1850–1920 (1983); B. Kelly and M. London, Amazon (1985); J. T. Medina, The Discovery of the Amazon (2d ed. 1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil
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books on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil  - 1990 results

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...the delta of the Amazon river in 1616 was the...North region of Brazil. From then until...mouth of the Amazon river, Manaus with 1.5...inhabitants in the state of Amazonas, and Sao Luis with...Q1 value added in Brazilian agriculture as a...
...Guianas, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia. Amazonas The largest...World The Brazilian Amazon: June 2000...vokes a river of sweat, and...highway to link Brazils new capital to the Amazon River and following...
...the Amazon River and its eleven...only the Amazonian portions of Brazil, Venezuela...Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia...Solimoes River region in...and the Amazon Rivers, and...Venezuela and the Brazilian state of...northern Peru, was another...
...Because of Brazils difficult balance-of-payments...the western Amazon, though these...began in the river channels rather...National Park in Peru. One sad reminder...The Amazon River drops only fifty-five...development of the Amazon region was...connecting Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Paraguay...
...Baby! The Amazon River jungle-Yanamono, Peru My wife...the Napo River. ACEER (the Amazon Center for...who came to Peru in the early...breaking on the river behind us...rainforest area of Peru, the only...Venice of the Amazon, where the...
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journal articles on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil  - 51 results

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...with Political Economy in the Modern Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Latin Amen can Studies...Peasant Households in Northeastern Peru: Empirical Observations and Implications...Peasant Agriculture along a Blackwater River of the Peruvian Amazon. Revista Geografica...
...Matsigenka, Eastern Peru. Acta Americana 3...agency in Western Amazonian shamanism. In Practitioners...of daily life in a Brazilian Indian village. Chicago...de Verano, Lima, Peru. STRINGER, M.D. 1999...Yanoama) of North Brazil. In Spirits, shamans...out of others in Amazonia. Journal of the Royal...
...by invasion from Peru. Past experience...that the Ecuadorian Amazon will not be controlled...many parts of the Brazilian Amazon. The experience...Urbanization in the Brazilian Amazon. Geographical Review...Ecuador, and Northern Peru. Gainesville: University...
...title, Bye Bye Brazil. When the circus...a group of Amazonian Indians, the...trance. The Brazilian masses and even the native Amazonian Indians, addicted...of a great river. London: Hamish...frontier in Brazilian Amazonia. Geographical...
...Popular accounts portray the Amazon rain forest as besieged on all...mestizos known as caboclos (in Brazil) or riberenos (in Peru). Despite their large numbers...producers who are indebted to river traders, may be misguided unless...
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magazine articles on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil  - 85 results

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...Casiquiare to their settlements in Brazil. A year later, a French geographer...abuse: did he really believe a river could flow over a watershed...between the Orinoco and the Amazon is a monstrous error of geography...Caribbean ports from as far away as Peru. The Casiquiare phenomenon...
...and rights. Even the violence in Peru and Brazil is a reflection of those organizations...anthropologist who has worked with Amazonian indigenous organizations for more...floated the length of the Amazon River. Sub-sequent colonization brought...
...local phenomenon off the coast of Peru) showed that it not only can reach...continent, including in northeast Brazil and the Amazon. In 2005 the Amazon suffered the...from climate change. The Amazon River system is rich in fish diversity...
...extreme north of Brazil, he persuaded...unexplored Uraricoera river, across an unknown...mouth of the Amazon. Bates had left...travelled through Peru and its Amazonian...explorations of Amazon forests. In...100-kilometre Iriri River in central Brazil. I was deputy...
...his military advisers issued their Nossa Natureza. Its primary pronouncements for Amazonia include the establishment of a national park between Brazil and Peru, an end to fiscal incentives for forest clearing (virtually cut off already) and a...
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newspaper articles on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil  - 19 results

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...pieces of pirarucu or peacock bass, Brazilian beef in various sauces, copious quantities...until you beg them to stop. * The Amazon River, including more than 1,000 tributaries...source in the Andes Mountains in Peru to the Atlantic Ocean. * The Amazons...
...transportation Feb. 26 at a sawmill near Anapu in the Amazonian rain forest about 375 miles from Belem, northern Brazil. Anapu resident Rita da Silva enjoyed a mango on the bank of the Anapu River a week earlier. 2 Photos by Agence France-Presse...
...than guilty of doing nothing." Amazon Heartbeat is on STV on Monday. AMAZING AMAZON THE river is 4,000 miles or 6,400km long. It flows through Peru, Colombia and Brazil. At its widest point in the wet season it is 28 miles across. The estuary is...
...health service on theAmazon River was also established, providing...Vine Trusts work featured in Amazon Heartbeat, an eight-partdocumentary...fromScotland and the U.S. have gone to Peru. They travel the Amazon, providing...work into Ecuador,Bolivia and Brazil, and hopes to encourage as many...
...Bruces progress along the Amazon river from itssource in Peru to the Atlantic Ocean via Brazil. What started as a persistent...Christmas and returned to the Amazon earlier thismonth to continue...during his three weeks in Peru and arrivedat the hospital...
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encyclopedia articles on: Amazon River Peru and Brazil  - 12 results

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AMAZON , river, Peru and Brazil Port. Amazonas...near Belem. The Amazon carries more water than any other river in the world. The...not only most of N Brazil but also parts of Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia...
...the north, on Brazil and Bolivia...Land Peru, which varies...drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries...economic activity. Peru has a large...coast and in the Amazon basin, and there...Chile, and Brazil. Peru is a member...
...bordering on Bolivia, Peru, and Colombia; in the...Janeiro . Land Brazils vast territory covers...rain forests of the Amazon River basin occupy all the...rain forests of the Amazon River basin; 12% of Brazils land has been set aside...
...rising in the Andes Mts., E Peru. It flows generally northeast...meandering course, across Acre and Amazonas states, NW Brazil, to the Amazon River. Mostly navigable, it traverses...region and receives the Acre River at Boca do Acre...
...rising in the Cerros de Canchyuaya, E Peru. It flows in a winding course generally NE through Acre and Amazonas states, W Brazil, to the Amazon River E of Fonte Boa. One of the Amazons longer tributaries, it is navigable...
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