Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Amazon River
Episode Date: March 19, 2023Located in the heart of South America is the Amazon, the world's largest river. It isn’t just big, it is by almost any measure you can think of the world’s largest river, and it is so by a wide ma...rgin. In addition to the river itself, the Amazon basin is the location of one of the greatest collections of biodiversity on the planet. It is home to millions of species of plants and animals. Despite its enormous size and importance, there is one area where the Amazon falls behind the other great rivers of the world. Learn more about the Amazon, the world’s largest river, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Located in the heart of South America is the Amazon, the world's largest river.
It isn't just big, it is by almost any measure you can think of the world's largest river,
and it is so by a wide margin.
In addition to the river itself, the Amazon Basin is the location of one of the greatest
collections of biodiversity on the planet.
It's home to millions of species of plants and animals.
Learn more about the Amazon, the world's largest river, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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I've done several other episodes on the world's great rivers, and in each one I always end up referencing the Amazon.
Given how big and important the river is, I figured it was time for a lot of the river.
its own episode. The Amazon River is the largest river in the world, and it isn't even close.
A full 20% of the world's fresh water that flows into the ocean comes from the Amazon.
On average, approximately 230,000 cubic meters, or 8.1 million cubic feet of water flow out of the
Amazon each second. To put that in perspective, it's more than the next seven largest rivers in the world
combined. There is so much water flowing out of the Amazon that the sea level in the Caribbean
is three centimeters higher than it should be because of all the water carried north by the Caribbean
current. If you remember back to my episode on the Nile River, the Nile might be the longest
river in the world, or it might be the Amazon. The reason for the debate has to do with the fact that
the length of both rivers are almost the same, and there's no set way to define the length of a river.
The problem has to do with how you define the start and end of the Amazon.
The source of the Amazon, despite the region having been extensively mapped, is still debated.
It's usually defined as the farthest point of continuously flowing water that can travel to the river's mouth.
However, what if the farthest point doesn't flow year-round and sometimes dries up?
What if each time you hit a tributary, you take a branch with the most water flow?
In the case of the Amazon, you get different answers depending on which definition you.
you use. Likewise, the endpoint of the river is also in question. At the mouth of the river is a very
large island known as Marajot Island. The river flows north and south of the island. The endpoint is
usually defined as being north of the island, but it's also connected to the para estuary in the
south, which would be a bit longer. So if you want to, you can define the Amazon to be the
world's longest river, and you wouldn't necessarily be wrong. The Amazon can be anywhere from 200 kilometers
shorter than the Nile or 100 kilometers longer. The approximate length of the Amazon, which is usually
rounded off because of the ambiguity, is given as 6,500 kilometers or 4,000 miles. The Amazon is also
the widest river in the world. During the dry season, it can be 6.8 miles or 11 kilometers
across, which would still be the widest river in the world.
But during the wet season, it can more than double, growing to 24.8 miles or 40 kilometers in width.
The thing that really matters for a river, however, isn't the length or width of any particular channel of water.
It has to do with the total basin that flows into the river.
Not surprisingly, the Amazon River Basin is the largest in the world as well.
It covers an area of approximately 7 million square kilometers or 2.7 million square miles.
Water from several countries flows into the Amazon, including Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil,
and small bits of Venezuela, Guyana, and Suriname.
60% of the basin is inside Brazil, with 40% divided between the other countries.
By the time the Amazon enters Brazil, it's already the largest river in the world by water flow.
There are over 1,100 tributaries that flow into the Amazon River.
The name Amazon was given by European explorers.
The original name used by Europeans was the Amaranyan River.
The name Amazon came from the 16th century Spanish explorer Francisco de Oriana.
During an expedition in the Amazon, he was attacked by a group of warriors, which was led by a woman.
This reminded him of the female Amazon warriors from Greek mythology.
So he dubbed the river, the Amazon, and the name stuck.
So why is the Amazon?
so big, what makes it different than every other river in the world? It all has to do with the
Andes Mountains and the latitude it's at. Between 30 degrees north and 30 degrees south, winds tend to
blow from east to west. This area is also within the tropics where it's quite warm. In the case of
South America, that means warm, moist air from the Atlantic blows over South America until it hits
the Andes Mountains. The Andes run north-south and serves as an affronts.
barrier to moisture. It precipitates out as rain and flows back down to the sea. Furthermore,
there are elevated escarpments on both the north and south of the river, which sort of makes the
entire Amazon basin like a giant bowl. If you look at an exaggerated relief map of South Africa,
you'll clearly see it. Believe it or not, there is a river below the Amazon which follows its
general path. It's known as the Hamza River, and it's a slow-moving aquifer that lies four
kilometers below the surface. It's approximately 6,000 kilometers long, and it's actually wider than the
Amazon. One of the amazing facts that geologists have discovered about the Amazon is that the river
might be older than the Andes. About 10 million years ago, the Amazon basin probably drained
north into the Pacific, just west of where Panama is today. The north-south orientation of the
Andes is the reason why the Amazon is so big. The Himalayas, for example, run roughly east-west, and is
located closer to 60 degrees north latitude, so it doesn't block as much moist air. It does block
some, but nothing like the Andes. The enormous Amazon basin, coupled with its tropical
latitude, results in the Amazon rainforest, the world's largest. The Amazon rainforest has often been
called the lungs of the world, but this isn't quite true. It is true that the plants in the
rainforest produce the equivalent of 20% of the Earth's oxygen. However, just as much oxygen,
is taken out of the atmosphere by decomposing organic matter on the floor of the rainforest.
The Amazon rainforest is home to the largest amount of biodiversity on the planet. A full one-third of
all animal species in the world are believed to be in the Amazon. It's impossible to know exactly
how many species live in the rainforest, but the number is in the many millions. There are new species
of insects, plants, and animals that are being discovered all the time. There are several notable
species that live in the Amazon. One is the Amazon River dolphin, the largest species of
freshwater dolphin in the world, and they're notable for their pink color. The Amazon is also home
to the giant otter, which is the largest weasel in the world, as well as the green anaconda,
which is the world's largest snake. The most famous species is probably the piranha. Most of what
people know about the piranha is myth and legend. People think that if you fall into the water
with piranhas, you'll be shredded apart in seconds. Much of the public
of piranhas came from President Teddy Roosevelt, who took a trip to the Amazon in 1913.
There he witnessed piranhas devour an entire cow. In reality, what happened was the villagers
he was visiting knew he was coming, so they netted a large number of piranhas and held them
without feeding them. When the president arrived, they put an abnormally large number of hungry
fish into the water all at once, and then fed him a cow. Piranhas do have a nasty bite,
but they mostly feed on dead or wounded animals in the water.
In cases where drowning victims have been pulled out of the river, there have been bites,
but no cases of an entire body being torn apart.
Also, prana species are not all carnivorous.
Most are omnivorous, and a few species actually feed solely on plants.
However, the most interesting species in the rainforest are humans.
The Amazon is home to the largest number of uncontacted tribes in the world.
All five of the major Amazon countries have people.
people who have remained isolated from the rest of the world and live according to their
traditional ways. Most of these tribes have had some sort of limited contact in the past, but
their remote location makes them difficult to reach. And this is probably for the best, as many
tribes have fallen victim to ranchers and miners who wanted to take the land that they lived on.
The Brazilian Department of Isolated Indians estimates that there are 67 uncontacted tribes
just living in Brazil. Researchers have also discovered that the
the remains of ancient settlements in the Amazon, which date back 10,000 years. What they've discovered
has completely upended our understanding of how humans used to live in the region. They may have
created artificial forest islands, which were mounds of land that stayed dry even during flooding
during the wet season. It might be one of the earliest examples of plant domestication and agriculture
ever found, and evidence that early inhabitants actually shape the rainforest to their benefit.
There's still quite a bit of research that needs to be done, as this is a very difficult place to gather evidence, and this is all still rather new.
There are also humans living in the Amazon basin who are in contact with the rest of the world.
In a previous episode, I spoke about the geography of major rivers and how they determine the fate of those living near them.
For example, the Congo is difficult to navigate due to large waterfalls and rapids in the river.
The Nile can't be easily navigated above the cataracts near the Egypt-Sudan border.
and it flows mostly through desert. The Mississippi River Basin, in comparison, has almost no
waterfalls or rapids, plus it flows through extremely productive farmland. The Amazon is a very
navigable river. There are no waterfalls or rapids until you get very close to the headwaters
near the Andes. However, the Amazon basin has, for the most part, been a very unattractive
place for people to live. The soil in the rainforest is actually quite poor, which doesn't make for good
farming. Moreover, whenever you clear land, you have to constantly fight back against the jungle,
which wants to reclaim it. There are a few roads in the Amazon Basin, which makes transportation
difficult, and it would be difficult to build roads in the region even if you wanted to. There are
currently no bridges over any part of the Amazon River. In theory, while a bridge could be built,
there's currently no pressing need for one. There's nothing to connect it to and not enough people
to use it. Moreover, building on soft wet land over a river that regularly floods and meanders
would be incredibly expensive. The entire Amazon Basin only has a population of 26 million people,
giving it one of the lowest population densities on Earth. The Peruvian city of Akitos is located
in the Amazon Basin, has a population density of close to half a million people, and isn't
connected to the rest of the world by road. It is the largest city in the world without any road access.
The only way there is by plane or boat.
Other major cities in the Amazon basin include Manaus with a population of 2.2 million,
Berlin with a population of 1.5 million, and Makapa with a population of half a million.
And all three of those are in Brazil.
So despite being such a huge navigable river, the Amazon doesn't have as much of an economic impact
as most other great rivers of the world, mostly because of the land it flows through
and the small number of people who live alongside it.
I'll close this discussion of the Amazon River by mentioning one of the natural oddities which
takes place on the river twice a year. Despite the enormous amount of water that flows out of the
Amazon, when conditions are just right, water can sometimes flow into the Amazon from the Atlantic Ocean.
This event is known as a Poro Roca. It is a tidal bore that occurs on the full or new moons when tides
are the highest, and the effect is most pronounced near the equinoxes in March and September. At the high tide,
a single wave will flow into the river, which can go as far as 800 kilometers or 500 miles upstream.
And needless to say, wherever there is a wave, you will find surfers.
Surfing, the Pororoka, has become popular, and there's now an annual competition to see who can surf the wave the longest.
The record ride was set in 2003, with a ride of 12.5 kilometers or 7.8 miles lasting 37 minutes.
Despite all the travels I've done around the world, I still have yet to visit the Amazon.
It's near the top of my list of places I would still like to see.
And for a very good reason, because the Amazon River, Basin, and Rainforest make up one of the greatest natural wonders on planet Earth.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
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