A Way to Save the Amazon?

New technology could help make deforested land fertile once again

Written byWake Forest University
| 2 min read
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A new technology being developed by Wake Forest University researchers could help reverse the devastating effects of deforestation and mining on the world’s largest rainforest.

Few people grasp the importance of the Amazon. It drives the world’s climate and weather patterns and annually absorbs 1.5 billion metric tons of C02.

This priceless resource is nevertheless being destroyed at an alarming rate. Since 1978, over 289,000 square miles of Amazon Rainforest has been lost across South America. Once an area of trees is removed, the soil loses its ability to retain essential nutrients, which in turn makes it difficult for trees and crops to grow.

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