In Brazil’s Soure, on Marajo Island, buffaloes serve as transport, agricultural helpers, and patrol animals, reflecting their deep role in local life and coexistence with humans – just across from ...
SOURE, Brazil -As officials and activists gather in the Brazilian city of Belem for the COP30 United Nations climate talks, ...
In the far north of Brazil lies Marajó- a sprawling island where the mighty Amazon River kisses the Atlantic Ocean. Roughly ...
For more than 40 years Ivanil lived in a house raised on stilts just 20 metres from the water’s edge, in the same community ...
On the world’s largest river island, a new research project is uncovering a long-overlooked story of biodiversity and evolution. Marajó Island — located in northern Brazil where the Amazon River meets ...
Dona Cruz, 77, lives and works in a small house with plastered walls. Her simple life in Soure, a municipality on Marajó Island, Pará, contrasts with the type of clothing she makes every day: a Marajó ...
The largest river island in the world is not Majuli but the massive Marajó Island in Brazil, which covers 40,100 km² at the mouth of the Amazon River. Learn about the largest fluvial island in the ...
Farmers in the state are betting on improving the Murrah breed to export meat. In the fifth ANBA report on Pará’s ...
Brazil holds the longest coastline in the world, extending for around 8,000 kilometers. With this great extension, tourists can easily find several beaches and islands in Brazil, making this Latin ...
Coronavirus cases and deaths are growing at a significant rate in Brazil, and experts speculate the country could surpass US numbers by July. On both Tuesday and on Wednesday, Brazil recorded more ...
The body of a young humpback whale washed ashore on Marajó Island in Brazil — and it ended up nearly 50 feet (15 meters) inland near the mouth of the Amazon river, according to a Facebook post from ...
How does the bulging carcass of a humpback whale end up on dry land, considerably removed from its usual hangout spot in the ocean? It's a question that seems to have taken hold of marine biologists ...