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Scientists Discover a Boiling River of Amazonian Legend

Devil Soul

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Scientists Discover a Boiling River of Amazonian Legend

Maddie Stone

Tuesday 12:53pm
Filed to: BOOK REVIEW
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Deep in the heart of the Amazon, legends tell of a river so hot that it boils from below. As a geoscientist, Andrés Ruzo’s training told him the stories couldn’t be true. But that was before he saw the river with his own eyes.

It’s incredible to think there are natural wonders on this planet not yet known to science, but such was the case for the river at Mayantuyacu, publicized for the first time in The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in the Amazon. The book is an engrossing, true story of discovery, adventure, science, and mysticism, told by a man who was driven to explain something impossible, and is now on a quest to preserve it.




When he was twelve years old growing up in Peru, Ruzo’s grandfather told him a strange story. After Spanish conquistadors killed the last Inca emperor, they headed deep into the Amazon rainforest in search of gold. Few of these men would ever return, but those who did spoke of a waking nightmare—poisoned water, man-eating snakes, starvation, disease, and a river that boils from below, as if lit by a great fire.

Mayantuyacu, nestled deep in the Peruvian rainforest and protected by a powerful shaman. Ruzo couldn’t quite believe it until he saw it for himself, but once he did, his life changed.

Up to 82 feet (25 meters) wide and 20 feet (six meters) deep, the river surges for nearly 4 miles at temperatures hot enough to brew tea or cook any animals unfortunate enough to fall in. And yes, a small portion of it is so hot that it actually boils. There are documented hot springs in the Amazon, but nothing nearly as large as this river.

“You’re surrounded by the sounds of the rainforest,” Ruzo told Gizmodo. “You feel this water surging past you and plumes of vapor coming up. It’s truly a spectacular place.”

Mayantuyacu is visited each year by a handful of tourists, who come to experience the traditional medicinal practices of the Asháninka people. Save several obscure references in petroleum journals from the 1930s, scientific documentation of the river is non-existent. Somehow, this natural wonder has managed to elude widespread notice for over seventy five years.

Many of us turn to fiction to escape the mundanity of the real world. But asThe Boiling River so poignantly illustrates, fantastical discoveries are lurking all around us. It takes a special type of persistence, and a little bit of crazy, to pull the clues out of the white noise of everyday routine. When Ruzo did, he was rewarded with the biggest adventure of his life.

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Sampling 207 degree Fahrenheit water, via Devlin Gandy
And it’s an adventure that’s just beginning. Having forged a strong relationship with the local community, Ruzo is now conducting detailed geothermal studies of the boiling river, attempting to place it in the context of the Amazon basin. He’s also collaborating with microbial ecologists to investigate the extremophile organisms living in its scalding waters. Anything that survives here could offer insights into how life got its start billions of years ago, when the Earth was a much harsher planet.

But most importantly, Ruzo’s trying to save the boiling river. “In the middle of my PhD, I realized, this river is a natural wonder,” Ruzo said. “And it’s not going to be around unless we do something about it.”

Since Ruzo first visited Mayantuyacu in 2011, the surrounding forest has been decimated by illegal logging. If action isn’t taken, the site—held sacred by generations of Asháninka cultural practitioners—could soon vanish.

Ruzo hopes that by putting a spotlight on the boiling river, he can garner the public interest and financial support needed to ensure its long-term survival. While Mayantuyacu faces many threats, from loggers to would-be energy developers, the coalition to protect its unique natural and cultural heritage grows stronger every day.

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Destruction of Amazon rainforest surrounding the Boiling River site, via Andres Ruzo
Ruzo recently received a grant from National Geographic, part of which will go toward using technology—drones, satellites, and the like—to learn which regions of the surrounding forest are the most vulnerable. To strengthen the conservation effort on the ground, he’s teamed up with Peruvian environmental organizations, and local community leaders.

Ultimately, if the boiling river is to survive, it’ll be because people came together and recognized its intrinsic value. After reading Ruzo’s captivating, real-life adventure story, you might be inclined to agree.

“I don’t like the concept of one person leading this charge—I think it’s about building a community on an international scale,” Ruzo said. “The planet’s gotten small, and natural wonders like this are few and far between.”
Scientists Discover a Boiling River of Amazonian Legend 
 
:tup: for Mother Nature
as for the keen daredevil ,plain stupidity:fie: @jamahir
 
Next up the fountain of youth :D

i was just reminded of the film 'the fountain' in which hugh jackman as the conquistador discovers the 'tree of life'.
 
There are many such places where heated steaming water gushes from the earth. I have seen it in Ethiopia, where the water springs from the earth boiling hot and smelling of sulphur. Ethiopians have built holiday resorts at some of these sites and even pipe this water into bath houses and use it to heat swimming pools. Something similar in Azores and people go and boil eggs in a boiling spring, it's a national dish for them.

I don't know why the water is boiling in Amazon but wherever I have seen this it is because of volcanic activity, the water is springing near magma. It is not that unusual.
 
:tup: for Mother Nature

nature, whether on this world or on other worlds or in space, has so much to make humans to discover, and yet in the "gravitational waves" thread some members are so fixed in their approach.

as for the keen daredevil ,plain stupidity:fie: @jamahir

he is wearing gloves but on his feet he is wearing chappals and no sign of a heat-resistant suit or even a rope tied to his waist. :D

for member 'sky lord' above this post, this discovery is 'not that unusual'. :lol:


how was this photo taken??

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Destruction of Amazon rainforest surrounding the Boiling River site, via Andres Ruzo

i don't understand... surely, the people who deforested the surrounding site would have seen the boiling river site the first time they approached the edge of the tree-line, so andreas ruzo would have known about this site from them... or was andreas ruzo the first human in modern times to witness the river??
 
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for member 'sky lord' above this post, this discovery is 'not that unusual'. :lol:

Kindly leave me out of your diatribes. If you don't believe me just move on.

For anyone else interested google Furnas in Azores or Sodere in Ethiopia.
 
Kindly leave me out of your diatribes. If you don't believe me just move on.

For anyone else interested google Furnas in Azores or Sodere in Ethiopia.

as if you don't discuss about me in that big sangh terrorist support thread. :lol:
 
D
as if you don't discuss about me in that big sangh terrorist support thread. :lol:
is everything for you about sanghi terrorists Jamahir? Is your little heart bruised by those meanies? Do you weep into your pillow about how misunderstood you are my little petal?

I am requesting you again, please don't bait. Thank you. :-)

I will not reply to you further because it is childish, immature, ridiculous and waste of time. You meanwhile I know will reply to this post with a long, rambling, annotated and completely meaningless post about nothing at all. To that future post, I give you the same digital expression that @Guynextdoor2 so humorously did on the other epic. thread.

Thank you, have a good day. Spend the next five minutes parsing my every word for hidden terrorist meanings and weep over how misunderstood you are, but please understand it makes no difference to me.:lol:
 
he is wearing gloves but on his feet he is wearing chappals and no sign of a heat-resistant suit or even a rope tied to his waist. :D

for member 'sky lord' above this post, this discovery is 'not that unusual'. :lol:
utterly unprofessional approach, sir @MastanKhan would have lynched him for that---if he was supervising----:D
 
the river-bank he is leaning from is deadly... it is a sloping area... one tumble, one slip, gone case.

amazing find, and that from a legend.

@Levina @Zibago @django @Mentee
I think i've seen Captain sparrow make a similar discovery. :P

Amazing discovery!!!
Remember this was a legend, which got Ruzo curious.
See, i always told you that our ancestors knew a lot more than we do. :-)

@S.U.R.B. @halupridol @SrNair @Star Wars
guys... i thought you be interested in this.
 
I think i've seen Captain sparrow make a similar discovery. :P

hmm, i didn't know that.

in which part did the flamboyant captain make such a discovery??

or do you mean that cave where the captain sparrow and his nemesis, captain blackbeard, fight over that 'fountain of youth'??

Amazing discovery!!!
Remember this was a legend, which got Ruzo curious.
See, i always told you that our ancestors knew a lot more than we do. :-)

ahem... agar jaan ka aman ho toh yeh na-cheez kuch kehna chaahta hai iss baare me. :D

not all legends are true... flying carpets, leprechauns and earthly egyptian divinities are myths... though sirens are true. ;)

about mermaids, the boat and mermaid scene in 'pirates of the caribbean : on stranger tides' was a scary scene - the music, setting, dialogue and all... gave me a fright :

Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides | Mermaids scene HD - YouTube

and ruzo, i wondered in a later post, was he the first person to witness this boiling river of was it those who deforested the river's surroundings??

and yes, it is a amazing discovery... something innocent about this, something common sense... that is why made a remark above about contrasting this discovery with the "gravitational waves" thing.
 
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