Brazil Uses Satellite to Conclude the Amazon is Larger than the Nile by 50 Km

A new element was injected into the dispute between the Amazon, in Brazil, and the Nile, in Egypt, over which is the world’s largest river: the conclusions of the Pan-Amazon Project, developed by five scientists from the Remote Sensing Division of the Brazilian National Space Research Institute (INPE).

Using satellite images furnished by the US space agency NASA, they created a universal method for measuring riverbed lengths.

"We measured the Amazon and the Nile. There are final analyses still to be done. But we are already able to affirm that the former is approximately 40 to 50 kilometers longer than the latter," the coordinator of the study, the geologist, Paulo Martini, told Radiobrás, Brazil’s state news agency.

"We don’t want to provoke controversies with anybody; we just want to help discover new truths about the world."

In school geography texts, children all over the world learn that the Nile, in Africa, is the world’s longest river, at 6,670 kilometers. By the INPE’s measurements, its length is approximately 6,610 kilometers.

"We still need to complete this analysis, because there is a debate about exactly where in Lake Victoria, in Uganda, the river originates. Just to say that it is in the lake is not enough, because Victoria extends for 300 kilometers," Martini explained.

The method developed by the scientists considers that the riverbed begins in its most distant source, not its most copious. Therefore, the Amazon originates not in the Marañon River, as specialized publications claim, but in the Ucayalli River, which is, in turn, fed by the Apurimac spring.

"Both places are in the Andes mountain range, in Peru. But the Apurimac spring is closer to the Pacific Ocean," Martini pointed out.

He argued that, to avoid confusion, the Apurimac spring, the Ucayalli River, and the Solimões River should be called the Amazon – this name currently applies only to the part downstream from where the Solimões merges with the Negro River, in Manaus.

According to the official data reported by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), the Amazon River is 6,570 kilometers long. The INPE study establishes the length to be 6,627 or 6,992 kilometers, depending upon which turns of the river are considered part of the main riverbed.

"We will present the data to the IBGE. They will decide whether to alter the official length," Martini said.

According to the scientist, the presentation is expected to take place in July, when the scientists also plan to undertake an expedition to the Andes.

Their measurement of the Nile and Amazon rivers has been going on for six months.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Movits’s multifaceted art

Brazilian Ricardo Movits is the artist who is writer who is musician who is ...

Book Says Brazil’s Lula Told Kirchner to Fuck Off. Ambassador Calls It Fantasy

Brazilian ambassador in Chile described as mere "fantasy" alleged statements by President Lula da ...

Brazil Wants to Use Sports for Social Improvement

Within 45 days Brazil’s National Sports Policy will be defined and officially approved, according ...

UN Praises Brazilian AIDS Program

The world director of the United Nations Joint Program for HIV/AIDS (Unaids), Peter Piot, ...

World’s Biggest Clinical Stem Cell Research in Brazil Jeopardized by Legal Appeal

{mosimage}A row has broken out between Brazil’s most senior law official and its health ...

Brazil’s Lula Appeals for Haiti and Africa in Paris

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva appealed to the international community to help ...

Brazil Congress Urges All-Hands-on-Deck Approach to Fight Child Sex

Gathered in Brazil, a United Nations-backed forum to combat the sexual exploitation of children ...

Brazilian Markets Seeing Red

Brazilian and Latin American shares returned a small portion of the impressive gains logged ...

Progressive Rock & Jazz Fusion – A Short History

Progressive Rock is an elusive term applied to that type of rock music that ...

Brazil Gafisa's Wilson Amaral de Oliveira rings NYSE opening bell

Gafisa Becomes 32nd Brazilian Company to Join NY Stock Exchange

Brazilian Wilson Amaral de Oliveira, CEO of Gafisa S.A., a leading homebuilding company in ...