rainforest

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  • Mark Dorf art for Terra Preta, Silica Mag x Engadget Dirt Issue

    How to reverse-engineer a rainforest

    by 
    Casey Halter
    Casey Halter
    05.25.2020

    2020 might be the year we all faced a pandemic. But 2019 was the year the earth burned. We are racing to reverse-engineer the rainforest — and like any half-decent architect, we’re going to have to do it from the ground up.

  • Jianhuai Ye/ Harvard SEAS

    Researchers are using drones to study the Amazon rainforest's health

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    09.13.2019

    Researchers from Harvard University are using drones to better understand the Amazon rainforest. With drone-based sensors, the researchers hope to determine the unique "fingerprint" of different rainforest ecosystems. That could help them monitor the health of the forest and understand how it's responding to climate change, deforestation and fire.

  • Google Street View cameras zip through (and over) the Amazon

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.02.2015

    Google already has some odd ways of getting its Street View cameras into hard-to-reach places, but its latest effort might just take the cake. The search firm has posted panoramic imagery of the Amazon rainforest that, at some points, was taken by Trekker cameras ziplining through the canopy -- yes, you'll get a view that even locals won't usually see. There are some down-to-Earth sights, too, including snapshots from rivers and remote villages. Between this and recent collaborative mapping projects, you may end up learning a surprising amount about the Amazon without setting foot in South America.

  • Smithsonian captures 201,000 wild photos with automated cameras

    by 
    Kevin Wong
    Kevin Wong
    03.11.2011

    We have this big, fang-filled, claw-sharpened big cat all up in our grill thanks to the researchers at the Smithsonian, who have created a new database filled with over 201,000 pictures of elusive animals in their natural habitats. These candid shots were made possible with motion-activated automated cameras scattered around the world, and feature over 200 species of birds and mammals, and here's most impressive part -- these photos are au naturel. That's right... there's no editing here, these are untouched raw shots straight from the rain forests of places like Peru and China -- which allow us to see these magnificent creatures as scientists do. If you want more info or desire to check out these wild photos, hop over to the source link or check out the gallery below. %Gallery-118866%