What If on MSN
How to Survive the Most Dangerous Animals of the Amazon
There’s a reason they warned you never to travel alone in the Amazon. As you go deeper into the rainforest, you start to feel ...
Every time humans cut into the Amazon rainforest or burn or destroy parts of it, they're making people sick. It's an idea Indigenous people have lived by for thousands of years. Now a new study in the ...
Scenic Relaxation on MSN
Amazon, Seen Differently – Nature from the Sky in 4K
This video presents the Amazon rainforest from a different perspective — seen from the sky. Captured in 4K with drone footage, featuring natural scenery and wildlife with background music and no ...
The world's most diverse forest, the Amazon, may also host more than 10,000 records of pre-Columbian earthworks (constructed prior to the arrival of Europeans), according to a new study. The new study ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A new model pinpoints "tipping points" that the Amazon rainforest is approaching due to climate ...
The Amazon rainforest is on course to reach a crucial tipping point as soon as 2050, with devastating consequences for the region and the world’s ability to tackle climate change, according to a study ...
A new study has found the rainforest’s largest trees are thriving, and continue to play a major role in mitigating the ...
A new study published today by Wake Forest University and an international team of scientists reveals that tree communities across the Amazon and Andes are not adapting quickly enough to climate ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results