Live Science on MSN
18 of Earth's biggest river deltas — including the Nile and Amazon — are sinking faster than global sea levels are rising
Worldwide, millions of people live in river deltas that are sinking faster than sea levels are rising, research suggests.
A shifting riverbank threatens Colombia’s main access to the Amazon waterway, as residents warn the region’s economies are ...
Fernando Araújo was riding his jet ski through Brazil's Rio Negro when he saw the small plane lose altitude and "crash into ...
Explore the Amazon’s 4,000-mile journey, which crosses into nine different nations You can only really do the Amazon from the water. The world’s greatest river rises in Peru’s Andean uplands and ends ...
Why an Amazon river cruise should be on your bucket list - Aboard a small ship in Peru, Angelina Villa-Clarke discovers a ...
Travel + Leisure on MSN
This Cruise Visits the Remotest Corners of the Amazon Rainforest—How to Plan a Trip
Some of the Amazon rainforest’s remotest reaches lie not in Brazil, but in Ecuador. A weeklong river cruise reveals the ...
In the heart of the Amazon Basin, where the borders and cultures of Peru, Colombia and Brazil converge, a tiny, shape-shifting island has become the unlikely setting for a diplomatic tug of war. Santa ...
The jungle town of Leticia provides Colombia’s only access to the Amazon River. But as the river changes course the town could soon be left high and dry and that’s fueling a border dispute with ...
Pink dolphins are an indicator species of the Amazon river, scientists say. Swimming with the piranhas and anacondas below the surface of the Amazon River in Bolivia is a rare species: pink, ...
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