View allAll Photos Tagged Amazon

The orphaned Capuchin Monkey Sarkozy - Tupana

Vincennes en anciennes : 24ème traversée de Paris

My personal favorite insect of the jungle: seemingly normal ants with an unending desire to cut little squares out of leaves and ferry them on their backs across great distances to their nest, where the leaf matter serves as food for the fungus the ants actually eat. They're the only animal species that actually cultivates a crop. If you pick up one o the leaves, the ant attached to it will windmill its legs wildly until you put it back down, at which point it will continue on its way as if nothing happened.

Amazon Travel

Easy Birding Peru offers tours from Cusco to the Manu National Park or to the Manu Biosphere, including our private Reserve Maquisapayoj, adjacent to the National Park.

 

- A trip to the untouched rainforest with plenty of undisturbed wildlife! EBP also offers various trekking tours, the Classic Inca Trail to Machu Picchu as well as several alternative treks.

Amazon Travel

For details see 'Cusco, Trekking and South of Peru'. The Manu National Park was created in 1973 and established a Biosphere reserve in 1977; in 1987 it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO, due to the world´s highest biodiversity in Manu.

It is one of the largest and most important conservation units of the world, it protects an entire virgin watershed, covering altitudinal ranges from 200 m to 4100 m above sea level.

 

Amazon Travel Why go to Manu?

Amazon Travel Ecotourism and Conservation

Manu is a very rich/ biodiverse but fragile ecosystem. Being home of several endangered species, e.g. Giant Otter, Harpy Eagle, Giant Anteater, Ocelot and Wooly Monkey, ecologically sustainable tourism in Manu is imperative and a low tourism flow is favourable.

Visitors should be informed about rainforest conservation and favorabletourism activities have to be controled ( e.g. don´t get too close to the animals). Ecotourism also is an important economic activity for the inhabitants of the rainforest that permits its use without distroying the rainforest resources.

 

That´s why it´s very important to involve local people in Manu tourism!

 

www.amazontrailsperu.net

  

Amazon Appstore Developer Summit, Tuesday, 4th October at CodeNode, London. Images copyright www.edtelling.com

Taken with my dad's Kodak Pro 14N

Amazon - Shipibo tribe - design cross-body fabric bag.

Available in diverse colors.

3265

Shoulder buttons of the Kindle

Truck on the road to a Brazil nut concession owned by Felicitas Ramirez Surco, who holds 242 hectres in the Unamat forest, Puerto Maldonado, Madre de Dios, Peru.

 

For the full story see:

Harvesting brazil nuts in Peru www.blog.cifor.org/16623/harvesting-both-timber-and-brazi...

 

Photo by Marco Simola/CIFOR

 

For more information on CIFOR's research on Brazil nuts in Peru, please contact Manuel Guariguata (mailto:m.guariguata@cgiar.org)

 

cifor.org

 

blog.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

This picture was taken in Yacuma Ecolodge in its 300 acres of protected Rainforest in the Amazon – Ecuador

www.ecuadoramazonjunglelodge.com/

 

Floresta Amazônica na Floresta Nacional do Tapajós - Brasil.

Amazon rainforest in the Tapajós National Forest - Brazil.

So I paid a visit to Amazon today on the newly-working Ubuntu laptop. Hadn't logged in yet. It showed something about saunas, and I was curious about the price and what they typically cost. This is a screenshot of the browser window (I had to stitch two views together with Imageready). I thought the "also bought" stuff was hilarious.

XD Amazon screwed up the Novi Stars and Lalaloopsy product features! Nothing for Mae though :o

Una's description is on the listing for Specs

Views from the river of the Huni kuin (Kaxinawa) tribe of Amazonian forest people, residing on the river Jordão in the state of Acre, Brazil.

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

This is a typical home in the Peruvian Amazon. This particular house sits on an oxbow lake off of the Rio Mazan in the village of Gamitana Cocha. This photograph is part of a solution which provides health care to over 6,000 people in the Amazon rainforest each year. Learn more about what we do at NGO AidJoy.

Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data [2023], processed by Niklas Jordan

 

An Amazon River plume stretches thousands of kilometres across the tropical Atlantic Ocean.

 

️#Copernicus Sentinel-3, 19-06-2023

 

Image is about 525 kilometers wide.

 

Follow me on Twitter and Mastodon!

 

(CC BY 2.0)

A screenshot from NASA's open source World Wind, an interface for 4.6 terabytes of satellite images of the Earth and her Moon, Mars, Venus, and Jupiter.

 

This is in the Brazillian Amazon:

Lat: -2.953

Long: -58.101

Altitude: 52.8km

 

www.learntek.org/product/amazon-web-services-training/

 

Learntek is global online training provider on Big Data Analytics, Hadoop, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, IOT, AI, Cloud Technology, DEVOPS, Digital Marketing and other IT and Management courses. We are dedicated to designing, developing and implementing training programs for students, corporate employees and business professional.

 

www.learntek.org

  

An Amazon Milk Frog at Connecticut's Beardsley Zoo.

 

www.beardsleyzoo.org/

First Greater Manchester BF63HDU is seen at Manchester Airport Bus Station whilst operating a Amazon Staff Shuttle Service

An Amazon Prime Air cargo plane is serviced on the tarmac at Tampa International Airport in Florida. Amazon's dedicated air cargo network, launched in 2016, is a critical component of its logistics operations, enabling faster delivery times for Prime members. The airport serves as a hub for both passenger and cargo flights, supporting the region's economy and facilitating the movement of goods.

Got back on the boat and cruised over to Peru on the other side of the river.

The last four are the americans. Well three and me. Always heading up the rear. Thats our guide Piro in the lime green Iberostar shirt. He was telling us of his early days growing up in the jungle. Interesting to say the least. By 10 years old you are expected to be able to survive on your own in the jungle.

A visit to Amazon's recently opened bricks-and-mortar store.

This is Lake Puraquequara off of the Amazon River. This picture was taken a few days before I left. The year this was taken was the dryest year ever for the Amazon. This is documenting the raising of the water.

Urubu River - Amazon, Brazil

Two abandoned Volvo 122s. Probably the rustiest crap I've ever seen.

 

(Taken last spring, they're gone now.)

1 2 ••• 12 13 15 17 18 ••• 79 80