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  1. Amazon Rainforest Case Study Information Sheet (AQA)

    geography case study amazon rainforest

  2. Case Study: Amazon Rainforest

    geography case study amazon rainforest

  3. AMAZON RAINFOREST case study A-Level geography OCR ELSS

    geography case study amazon rainforest

  4. The Amazon Rainforest

    geography case study amazon rainforest

  5. Amazon Rainforest case study

    geography case study amazon rainforest

  6. Amazon Rainforest Case Study Information Sheet (AQA)

    geography case study amazon rainforest

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  1. Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest

    The Amazon in context. Tropical rainforests are often considered to be the "cradles of biodiversity.". Though they cover only about 6% of the Earth's land surface, they are home to over 50% of global biodiversity. Rainforests also take in massive amounts of carbon dioxide and release oxygen through photosynthesis, which has also given ...

  2. Coolgeography

    Living World - Amazon Case Study The Amazon is the largest tropical rainforest on Earth. It sits within the Amazon River basin, covers some 40% of the South American continent and as you can see on the map below includes parts of eight South American countries: Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, and Suriname.

  3. AQA A level geography (AMAZON RAINFOREST CASE STUDY)

    Carbon sink. How much carbon did the rainforest use to absorb before 1990s? 2.2 billion tonnes of CO2. How much did carbon did the rainforest absorb in 2015? only 1 billion. The rainforest is at risk of becoming a what? A carbon source. How much has tree biomass increased? By 0.3-0.5%.

  4. Tropical rainforest case study

    Case study of a tropical rainforest setting to illustrate and analyse key themes in water and carbon cycles and their relationship to environmental change and human activity. Amazon Forest The Amazon is the largest tropical rainforest on Earth. It sits within the Amazon River basin, covers some 40% of the South American continent and as you can ...

  5. Sustainable Management of the Amazon Rainforest

    Sustainable management ensures rainforests are worth. more than the value of the timber and other resources that can be extracted, such as gold. An example of this is sustainable foresty, which balances the removal of trees to sell with the conservation of the forest. Selective logging involves only removing a small number of trees, allowing ...

  6. Amazon Deforestation: A Regional Conservation Case Study

    The Amazon rainforest is the largest tropical forest in the world, covering over 1.5 billion acres. It is home to over 5,000 animal species, 40,000 plant species, and approximately 40 million humans (WWF). The Amazon acts as a massive carbon sink; meaning it absorbs large amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

  7. Case Study: Deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest

    100 billion tonnes of carbon are stored in the wood of the trees in the Amazon. If the Amazon were completely deforested, it would release the 100bn tonnes and also reduce the amount of carbon dioxide taken out of the atmosphere by 2bn tons each year. Trees anchor soil in the ground, bound to their roots. Deforestation damages the topsoil and ...

  8. Case Study: The Amazonian Road Decision

    On the western edge of the Amazon River, there is a proposal to construct a road. This road would connect the remote town of Cruzeiro do Sul, Brazil, with the larger city of Pucallpa, Peru. The construction of the road has become a subject of contentious debate. Proponents of the road claimed that it would provide an efficient way for rural ...

  9. Threats to the tropical rainforest

    The tropical rainforests of the Amazon Basin face the threat of deforestation close deforestation The cutting down of trees and forests to allow a different land use..Deforestation is happening ...

  10. Geography Case Studies

    Geography Case Studies - A wide selection of geography case studies to support you with GCSE Geography revision, homework and research. X; Facebook; Youtube; 0 Shopping Cart +Plus. ... Sustainable Management of the Amazon Rainforest; Temperate Deciduous Woodland. What is a Temperate Deciduous Woodland?

  11. Geography

    Hot and wet climate is ideal for the rapid and luxuriant growth of vegetation. Average temperature: 28°C. Annual rainfall: 2600mm. Amount the many tropical hardwood trees in the Peruvian Amazon is the rare and highly valuable big-leafed mahogany - prized for its timber for furniture and construction.

  12. A-Level OCR Geography: 2a. Case Study: Amazon Rainforest

    What are the physical factors affecting flows and stores of the carbon cycle? - temp: high temp = rapid vegetation growth + large biomass of Amazon (stores 100 billion tonnes of carbon) - vegetation: 60% of rainforest carbon is stored in the above-ground biomass of trees. - organic matter: leaf litter + dead organic matter on soil surface ...

  13. Amazon Rainforest: geography case study

    Meanwhile, total run-off and run-off speeds have increased, raising flood risks throughout the basin. Between 2000 and 2012, 30,000km 2 of Bolivian rainforest was cleared for subsistence farming and cattle ranching. Rainforest trees are a crucial part of the water cycle, extracting moisture from soil, intercepting rainfall and releasing it into ...

  14. The Amazon Rainforest

    AQA GCSE Infographic giving you case study information on animal and plant adaptations in Tropical Rainforests. This video covers the social, economic and en...

  15. PDF Case Study of a Rainforest Zone: Amazonia

    About 80% of Amazonia is rainforest; the rest is composed of seasonally flooded swamp forest and cleared, or cultivated, land. Variations in biodiversity reflect differences in regional climate, soils, geology, topography, drainage and past environmental histories. • The western Amazon, which experiences no dry season, has

  16. A-Level OCR Geography Case Study: Amazon Rainforest

    UN's REDD pays tribes to protect and revitalise the rainforest. In 2013, the Surui tribe sold 120,000 tonnes of carbon credits to a TNC. Improved agricultural techniques - diversification, rotational cropping and combining livestock and arable farming. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Amazon Rainforest ...

  17. The Amazon Rainforest

    The Amazon Rainforest. Occupying much of Brazil and Peru, and also parts of Guyana, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Suriname, French Guiana, and Venezuela, the Amazon River Basin is the world's largest drainage system. The Amazon Basin supports the world's largest rainforest, which accounts for more than half the total volume of rainforests in ...

  18. Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest

    Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest The Amazon in context. Tropical rainforests are often considered to be the "cradles of biodiversity." Though they cover only about 6% of the Earth's land surface, they are home to over 50% of global biodiversity. Rainforests also take in massive amounts of carbon dioxide and release oxygen through ...

  19. Geography: Case Study

    Case Study - The Amazon Rainforest. 2. The Natural Environment. 7. Deforestation in the Amazon. This is a revision page for the Amazon Rainforest case study. It provides a syllabus link, sample exam questions a summary of the case study and a revision quiz. To access the entire contents of this site, you need to log in or subscribe to it.

  20. Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest

    The Amazon rainforest in South America is the largest in the world. The second largest is the Congo in central Africa, and other important rainforests can be found in Central America, the Caribbean, and Southeast Asia. Brazil contains about 40% of the world's remaining tropical rainforest. Its rainforest covers an area of land about 2/3 the ...

  21. The Tropical Rainforest

    If you've found the resources on this site useful please consider making a secure donation via PayPal to support the development of the site. The site is self-funded and your support is really appreciated. The tropical rainforest contains over 50% of plant and animal life on planet Earth. Of all the biomes on this planet it is the most biodiverse.

  22. The Amazon Rainforest

    Lesson 8 for AQA A Level Geography. This is the eighth lesson in section A, a core physical geography module to be taught alongside optional modules from section B and C. This lesson covers the characteristics of the Amazon rainforest, the interaction of the water and carbon cycles in the system and the impact of human activity .