Skip to main content

Climbing in the Amazon rainforest

Time
18:00 - 24:00 o'clock
Organizer
Max-Planck-Institut für Biogeochemie
Place
Max-Planck-Institut für Biogeochemie
Adresse
Hans-Knöll-Str. 10, 07745 Jena

Deep in the Amazon rainforest stands a measuring tower as high as the Eiffel Tower in Paris. In our foyer, you can climb a model of the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory and learn about the research project at the same time.

The Amazon Tall Tower Observatory is a German-Brazilian research project. Over 200 scientists from all over the world are working together here. They want to find out more about the impact of the world's largest rainforest on our climate. They also want to understand how climate change and increasing deforestation are affecting the rainforest and whether it can continue to supply South America with rainfall in the future. Because the rainforest makes its own rain! And it is the continent's air conditioning system. Huge "flying rivers" transport water in the atmosphere from the Atlantic towards the Andes, further and further south. But without the rainforest, it gets hotter and drier.

Climb the stepper on our tower model and experience how the view of the forest changes with increasing height.

If that's too strenuous for you, you can also experience the rainforest and the research station up close with VR glasses or relax and wander through the fascinating photo exhibition.

Amazon research up close with VR glasses: https://www.lndw-jena.de/programm/amazonas-forschung-hautnah

Photo exhibition "The breath of the rainforest": https://www.lndw-jena.de/programm/der-atem-des-regenwaldes

 
Bild
Orange-Weiß gestreift ragt ein hoher, schmaler Stahlturm aus dem Kronendach der Bäume und erstreckt hoch hinaus über den Regenwald.
Der 325 Meter hohe ATTO-Turm im Amazonas Regenwald
, ©

Location

Sharing on social media