A Word of Caution About Rainforest Alarmists
Rainforest alarmists never point out that loss
figures for tropical forests are deducted from a gigantic base. The Amazon rainforest
covers about 1.7 million square miles, almost two-thirds the size of the 48 states. Even
after a decade of determined burning at least four-fifths of this wilderness, an area
larger than the United States east of the Mississippi, still stands primal and pristine.
Amazonia is so expansive and so lightly if clumsily touched by the human hand that
stretches of the region dozens of miles in length remain nearly uncharted.
During the late 1980's, when reporters traveled to Amazonia to produce stories
suggesting the entire region was on fire, dispatches contained a significant distortion.
There are only a handful of highways in the Amazon, most in the state of Rondonia. When
reporters drove those highways they saw columns of smoke in every direction; it seemed to
them the entire tropics was ablaze. But land-clearing projects concentrate along roads,
for the obvious reasons. Back in the vastness of the jungle fires were rare. Not venturing
far from their Land Rovers, reporters did not see this. Easterbrook, Gregg. Photo: PhotoDisc Inc.
[ Slash & Burn Agriculture ] [
From the Seat of the Bulldozer ] [ Regrowth
in the Amazon ]
[ Data Collection in the Amazon ] [ Colonization of the Rainforest ]
[ Loving
the Rainforest to Death ] [ Frogs in the Rainforest ]
[ Tropical Deforestation & Habitat Destruction ]
[ The Importance of Forests & the Perils of
Deforestation ] [ Hamburgers in the Rainforest ]
[ References ]
[ PBL Model ]
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