#amazonbasin

2025-10-13

For Indigenous Peoples' Day, celebrate world indigenous peoples with film plus our free educational resources. Combine classroom-ready lesson plans and discussion guides to make learning about World Indigenous Peoples part of your curriculum all year round.

journeysinfilm.org/teach-about

#Indigenous #IndigenousPeoplesDay #IndigenousPeoples #NativeAmericans #Education #Homeschooling #Movies #GlobalEducation #Aotearoa #NewZealand #Peru #AmazonBasin #AmazonRainforest #Kenya #FirstNations #Māori #Alaska

Over a gold background, black and white text says: "Teach About World Indigenous Peoples With Film." On the right here are film posters for River of Gold, Searching for Amani, Sugarcane, and Whale Rider. The Journeys in Film logo is at the bottom.
2025-09-22

Truth and Reconciliation Week (September 22–26) is a five-day program to engage students, educators, and the public in truth and reconciliation. Many schools will have activities and discussions about truth and reconciliation on September 30, 2025.

Get free resources for teaching and learning about World Indigenous Peoples to help in guiding, reflecting, and informing the ways we teach Indigenous stories and reflect on reconciliation at this moment.

journeysinfilm.org/teach-about

@canada

#NDTR #NativeAmericanDay #TruthAndReconciliation #TruthAndReconciliationWeek #IndigenousPeople #Movies #Education #HumanRights #Homeschooling #History #Histodons #FirstNations #Indigenous #Canada #Alaska #AmazonRainforest #AmazonBasin #Peru #GlobalEducation

Text over a blackboard background says: "World Indigenous Peoples. Teach with Film"

At the bottom, there are film posters for Sugarcane, The Wild, and River of Gold.

The Journeys in Film logo is in the top right corner.
charring auhcharring59
2025-09-02

is the part of South America drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries. The Amazon drainage basin covers an area of about 7,000,000 km2 (2,700,000 sq mi),[1] or about 35.5 percent of the South American continent. It is

#Amazonbasin is the part of South America drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries. The Amazon drainage basin covers an area of about 7,000,000 km2 (2,700,000 sq mi),[1] or about 35.5 percent of the South American continent. It is
rexirexi
2025-05-15

phys.org/news/2025-05-world-we

research sheds new light on the links between income-based inequality and , illustrating how the consumption and investments of wealthy individuals have had disproportionate impacts on . These impacts are especially severe in vulnerable tropical regions like the , , and southern —all areas that have historically contributed the least to .

2025-03-19

OnlineFirst - "‘Mine the volume’: Excess and the voluminous ecological politics of capitalist frontiers" by Yolanda Ariadne Collins, Theo Reeves-Evison, Matt Barlow, and Lydia E.S. Cole:

#mining #deepsea #outerspace #Amazonbasin #environmentalgovernmentality #volume

journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/

2025-01-25

"Researchers from the German Max Planck Institutes of Geoanthropology and Biology Tübingen use genomic data to study the decline in genetic diversity in the Amazon Basin, particularly in Brazil Nut trees".
#amazonbasin #nuttrees #genes #biodiversity
phys.org/news/2025-01-genomic-

2024-12-11

#Cree Journalist #BrandiMorin -- In #Ecuador Reporting on Canada's #Mining Atrocities

By Brandi Morin, #CensoredNews, December 10, 2024

"I've just returned to Canada after two weeks reporting from Ecuador's sacred lands, where the ancient Andes rise like guardians, their mist-shrouded peaks holding centuries of Indigenous wisdom.

"Here, where emerald mountains cascade into valleys painted with every shade of green imaginable, I documented horrific atrocities committed by Canadian-owned mining companies, backed by both the Canadian and Ecuadorian states, against Indigenous Peoples.
Where emerald mountains cascade into the Amazon basin – a living tapestry where towering ceiba trees stretch their cathedral-like buttresses into rich earth, where iridescent morpho butterflies flash brilliant blue against a thousand shades of green.

"In this realm life pulses in every corner – from the haunting calls of wildlife echoing through dawn mist, to the brilliant flashes of macaws painting the sky, to the delicate orchids that bloom in the embrace of ancient trees.

"The parallels to Canada's treatment of our own people are stark – the same calculated playbook of manufactured/false consent, manipulation, and human rights violations. But here, in these mountains where condors still soar and in forests where the very breath of Earth rises from countless leaves, the violence escalates to near-execution levels."

Read more:
bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2024/12

#ReaderSupportedNews #NoMiningWithoutConsent #WaterIsLife #SilencingDissent #TargetingActivists #Activists #WaterProtectors #EarthDefenders #Assassinations #AmazonBasin #Ecuador #CanadianMiningCompanies

2024-08-21

Climate Emergency: Feedback Loops is a series of five short videos about key feedback loops greatly accelerating climate change. This is a powerful tool for teaching about climate tipping points.

Our free curriculum guide includes a forward-looking lesson about regreening and climate solutions. 3/3

journeysinfilm.org/product/cli

#Education #ClimateChange #EvironmentalStudies #AmazonBasin #AmazoRainforest #Homeschooling #Edutooters #Documentary @education @edutooters @stemed

2024-08-21

River of Gold follows the clandestine journey of two war journalists and their guide into Peru’s Amazon rainforest to uncover the destruction of pristine jungle in pursuit of illegally mined gold. The film affirms the critical role of the Amazon in the global climate.

Our River of Gold Curriculum Guide is available in English, Spanish and Portuguese. 2/3

journeysinfilm.org/product/riv

#Education #ClimateChange #EvironmentalStudies #AmazonBasin #AmazonRainforest #Homeschooling #Edutooters #Documentary
@education @edutooters @stemed

2024-08-21

Author Rob Jackson writes in The Guardian that methane emissions are pushing the Amazon towards environmental catastrophe.

We have teaching resources to give this climate news context for your classroom. 1/3 ⬇

theguardian.com/environment/ar?

#ClimateChange #Methane #AmazonBasin #Education #Edutooters #EnvironmentalStudies #Homeschooling @education @edutooters @stemed

2024-05-28

The #RedEyedVireo was one of our far-away visitors here in #Maine!

Backyard Bird of the Month for May: Red-eyed Vireo
by Andy Kapinos

Birds, Maine's Naturalist, News & Notes · April 30, 2024

"Here I am! Where are you? Way up here! In the tree! So goes the song of the Red-eyed Vireo, heard in nearly every forested area between Kittery and Fort Kent from May until early autumn. True neotropical migrants, Red-eyed Vireos spend the nonbreeding season in the #AmazonBasin, especially in Colombia, Brasil, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Peru. Most depart South America during April, and over the course of a few weeks or a month, make their way up through Central America and the southeastern US, #migrating on clear nights and refueling during the day by feasting on the abundance of newly-emerged insects. The first males can reach Maine by the first week of May, but the majority arrive in the second and third weeks, just in time for the emergence of leaves and insects in the canopy of our forests.

"These canopy-dwellers are heard far more often than they are seen, and possess a huge vocal repertoire, combining various “syllables” into “phrases” that don’t repeat. In fact, there is often no similarity between the songs of males whose territories are right next to each other. While the males generally sing from treetops, Red-eyed Vireos forage and nest in the mid- and understory, and require forest habitat with layers of native shrubs and small trees. Their nests are usually built at these lower levels, with layers of foliage above to hide the nest from predators. They raise their young on insects, especially caterpillars and other larvae, before eating increasing amounts of fruit later in the summer, which they subsist on throughout the nonbreeding season. The return of Red-eyed Vireos to their breeding territories in Maine is a yearly reminder that conserving healthy forest #ecosystems is important not only here at home, but also in the neotropical #forests where they spend the rest of their lives."

maineaudubon.org/news/backyard

#birdwatching #BirdListening #MerlinApp #Merlin #BirdApp #MigratoryBirds

Archaeology News :verified:archaeology@mstdn.social
2024-03-08

Researchers from the University of Exeter have recently completed a comprehensive study shedding light on the early inhabitants of the Amazon Basin. Their investigation centered on rock shelters in northwest Colombia, which served as homes to some of the earliest migrants to South America approximately 13,000 years ago...

More information: archaeologymag.com/2024/02/arc

@archaeology

#archaeology #Amazon #amazonbasin #exeteruniversity #anthropology

pacanukeha❌ (seasonally appropriate remix)pacanukeha@mstdn.ca
2023-11-16

" Thousands of vulnerable turtles released back into the wild as part of repopulation effort. "

I am constantly amazed to be reminded that more of Peru is on the Amazon side of the Andes than the Pacific.

#Peru #AmazonBasin #Conservation
cbc.ca/news/world/thousands-of

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