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Amazon Tall Tower Observatory ATTO Max Planck Brazil Manaus Amazon Rainforest climate change global warming jungle ecosystem outside outside online outside magazine news from the field
The Amazon Tall Tower Observatory will be crafted out of steel transported 2,500 miles from southern Brazil by raft and truck. (Photo: Dallas Krentzel/Flickr)

Amazon Supertower to Measure Climate Change

Rainforest structure will be tallest in South America

Published:  Updated: 
Amazon Tall Tower Observatory ATTO Max Planck Brazil Manaus Amazon Rainforest climate change global warming jungle ecosystem outside outside online outside magazine news from the field
(Photo: Dallas Krentzel/Flickr)

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Brazil has broken ground on an observation tower in the Amazon that will rise above every skyscraper in South America and help scientists understand climate change in rainforest ecosystems.

The  that the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory (ATTO), rising 1,066 feet above the rainforest, will enable researchers to measure atmospheric changes over hundreds of square miles. Equipped with more than 30 high-tech instruments, the tower will enable scientists to investigate cloud formation, greenhouse gases, weather patterns, and other processes important for understanding climate change.

Located 100 miles from Manaus in an area relatively free of human impact, the tower will give researchers a better idea of how forests naturally influence atmospheric cycles. Large and dense forests like the Amazon play a major role in global carbon intake and release, a primary factor in global warming. According to , the tower will also help researchers measure the impact of climate change on the Amazon. 

Brazilian newspaper  that the tower is a joint effort between Brazil’s National Institute of Amazonian Research and Germany’s Max Planck Institute. It has been in planning stages since 2007 and has already cost nearly $8,500,000. It will be integrated into a system of smaller observatories, including one in Central Siberia. 

For a visual representation of the tower,  (text in Portuguese).

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Lead Photo: Dallas Krentzel/Flickr

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