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On 03, Nov 2010 | In Multi-Platform Storytelling | By erikgerman
Amazon Burning: Rivers run dry as drought hits Amazon
For Global Post
Amazon on the brink. Climate change spurs a worsening cycle of drought in the world’s biggest rainforest. Reporting this multimedia package for GlobalPost required three plane flights, a 4-hour truck ride into the bush and then 10-hour journey in a leaking canoe to reach the remote indigenous village where we finally broke out our cameras and notebooks.
Here’s an excerpt
MUTUM, Brazil — A motorboat barreling through the night up a shallow Amazon stream could only beat the odds for so long.
Just after 9 p.m., the aluminum canoe slammed to a halt with the sound of a thunderclap. Passengers and cargo lurched into the air. Shouts of surprise, profanity and a man-sized splash echoed in the dark.
A swift lesson on Newtonian physics and the risks of night boating had been delivered by a large, semi-submerged tree.
The mishap demonstrated what everyone in this remote corner of the Brazilian jungle had been saying for days.
The world’s largest rain forest was dangerously dry, and may well be drying out.
October marked the end of one of the worst Amazon droughts on record — a period of tinder-dry forests, dusty cropland and rivers falling to unprecedented lows. Streams are the highways of the deep jungle and they’re also graveyards for dead trees, usually hidden safely under fathoms of navigable water.
But not this year, and the drought’s significance extends far beyond impeded boats.
While the region has seen dry spells before, locals and experts say droughts have grown more frequent and severe. Scientists say there’s mounting evidence the Amazon’s shifting weather may be caused by global climate change.