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Text II


                    A river in flux
     MANAUS, BRAZIL—Jochen Schöngart darts back and forth 
along an escarpment just above the Amazon River, a short water 
taxi ride from downtown Manaus, Brazil. It’s still early this October 
morning in 2023, but it’s already hot and his face is beaded with 
sweat. “Look, there’s a piece of ceramic!” he says, nodding to a 
worn shard lodged between boulders, likely a relic of an earlier 
civilization. It’s not the only one.
     Schöngart, a forest scientist at the National Institute of 
Amazon Research (INPA), stoops and stares at the bedrock at his 
feet. Well below the river’s normal level for this time of year, the 
rock bears a gallery of life-size faces, perhaps carved during a 
megadrought 1000 years ago. Now, they have been exposed again 
by a new drought, the worst in the region’s modern history.
     In the previous 4 months, only a few millimeters of rain have 
fallen in this city of 2 million at the confluence of the Negro and 
Amazon rivers. Normally it gets close to a half a meter during the 
same period. The Amazon sank steadily beginning in June, as it 
does most years during the dry season. But by mid-October, the 
port’s river gauge reached the lowest level observed since the 
record began in 1902. Freighters coming up from the Atlantic 
Ocean—the city’s primary supply line—were blocked by shoals. 
Factories furloughed workers.
     Making matters worse, the drought coincided with a series of 
week-long heat waves. In September and October, withering 
conditions persisted across the Amazon, and temperatures here 
peaked at 39°C, 6°C above normal. Desiccated jungle set ablaze by 
farmers enveloped the city in choking smoke. Then, in the season’s 
most freakish episode, a sandstorm blotted out the Sun.
     Drought and heat are only half of the story of the changes 
unfolding in the heart of the world’s largest rainforest. Schöngart 
and collaborators’ research on the river here has shown that for 
decades, while dry-season low water has been plummeting, rainyseason high water has been rising. The city has experienced 
frequent major flooding in recent years because of heavy rains 
across much of the Amazon Basin, forcing the officials to erect 
temporary wooden walkways above streets of the historic 
waterfront.

     Schöngart and other researchers expect such changes to 
intensify as global climate warms. The current drought provided a 
grim preview, killing river dolphins and fish, and threatening 
livelihoods for communities along the river. If the combination of 
higher highs and lower lows becomes the new norm, the 
ramifications could extend throughout the Amazon Basin and even 
beyond, threatening the very existence of the forest—which 
harbors much of the planet’s biodiversity, has a far-reaching 
influence over regional and global climate, and sustains millions of 
people.

    “We are undergoing massive changes in the hydrological 
cycle” of the Amazon Basin, Schöngart says. The question now, he 
says, is whether its ecosystems and people can adapt.
Adapted from: https://www.science.org/content/article/amazon-river-may-altered-forever-climate-change 

The situation described in the 5th paragraph is:

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