Wednesday, 8 Jul 2026
Las Vegas News
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • News
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Las Vegas
  • Las
  • Vegas
  • news
  • Trump
  • crime
  • entertainment
  • politics
  • Nevada
  • man
Las Vegas NewsLas Vegas News
Font ResizerAa
  • About Us
  • Our Authors
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
News

Amazon Dark Earth Reveals Greater Carbon Storage

By Matthias Binder May 11, 2026
The Amazon Dark Earth Discovery That Could Be the Most Significant Climate Science Breakthrough Since the Discovery of the Carbon Cycle
The Amazon Dark Earth Discovery That Could Be the Most Significant Climate Science Breakthrough Since the Discovery of the Carbon Cycle - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
SHARE

The Amazon Dark Earth Discovery That Could Be the Most Significant Climate Science Breakthrough Since the Discovery of the Carbon Cycle

Contents
Distinct Properties of the SoilUpdated Carbon EstimatesOrigins and Ongoing DebatePractical Implications Ahead

The Amazon Dark Earth Discovery That Could Be the Most Significant Climate Science Breakthrough Since the Discovery of the Carbon Cycle – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)

In Brazil’s Xingu Indigenous Park, patches of dark, fertile soil stand out against the surrounding reddish landscape and quietly store more carbon than researchers once calculated. This material, long known to local communities, now draws fresh attention from climate scientists because its stability and scale could shift how the Amazon’s role in global carbon cycles is measured. A 2024 study by teams from the United States and Brazil found that the dark earth within the park alone holds roughly nine million tons more carbon than prior estimates allowed.

Distinct Properties of the Soil

Terra preta differs sharply from typical Amazon soils in both color and performance. It appears almost charcoal black and supports trees that grow up to six times taller than those in adjacent areas. The soil maintains its fertility and carbon content over long periods without ongoing human input, a trait that sets it apart from most tropical soils that lose nutrients quickly.

- Advertisement -

Scientists have tracked these patches across about 3.4 percent of the park’s total area. The material’s ability to retain carbon stems from its high concentration of stable organic compounds, which resist breakdown even under humid rainforest conditions. This durability has prompted comparisons with modern carbon-capture methods that require far more infrastructure and energy.

Updated Carbon Estimates

Earlier models placed total carbon stored in the Amazon biome at 123 billion tons above and below ground. The new findings adjust that picture by showing that dark earth contributes an additional nine million tons within the Xingu park alone. That adjustment matters because it changes the baseline used in climate projections for one of the planet’s largest natural carbon sinks.

The 2024 research builds on a 2021 study published in Nature Communications that first questioned long-held assumptions about the soil’s distribution. Researchers now recognize that dark earth extends beyond previously mapped zones, which means broader surveys could reveal still larger reserves. These revisions arrive at a time when deforestation has already removed 13.2 percent of the Amazon biome as of 2022.

Origins and Ongoing Debate

Two main explanations compete to account for how the soil formed. One view holds that ancient indigenous groups created it deliberately by mixing charcoal, food waste, and bones into the ground over centuries. The other suggests that rivers and alluvial deposits supplied much of the mineral base, with later human activity simply concentrating and using the resulting patches.

Evidence from calcium and phosphorus levels supports the geological contribution in many sites, yet signs of human modification appear in others. No single theory has gained full acceptance, and most researchers now expect the answer to involve both natural processes and intentional management. The unresolved question affects how readily the soil’s properties might be reproduced elsewhere.

- Advertisement -

Practical Implications Ahead

Replicating even a fraction of terra preta’s performance could support soil restoration projects and improve crop yields in degraded tropical regions. Agronomists and climate modelers are examining whether controlled additions of charcoal and organic matter can produce similar results outside the Amazon. Early trials show promise, though scaling remains limited by local soil chemistry and climate conditions.

Key areas to watch include expanded mapping of dark earth beyond the Xingu park and field tests that measure long-term carbon retention under different land uses. Success in these efforts would give communities and policymakers a low-technology option for strengthening carbon sinks while supporting food production.

Key points to track:

  • Further surveys to refine total carbon estimates across the Amazon basin
  • Controlled experiments testing replication methods in varied tropical soils
  • Integration of dark-earth insights into updated climate and land-use models

The discovery underscores how much remains to learn from long-standing land practices in the Amazon. Whether the soil’s advantages prove widely transferable or stay tied to specific locations, its documented performance already invites a closer look at what past ecosystems achieved without modern equipment.

- Advertisement -
Previous Article Midwives in Pakistan navigate floods to care for parents and babies Midwives Reach Mothers Amid Pakistan Floods
Next Article Wild Blueberry Farms Across Maine Suffer as Climate Change Upends Growing Seasons Maine’s Wild Blueberry Growers Confront Pressures from Heat and Drought
Advertisement
Advertisement
If You Secretly Love These 10 Underrated Films You Probably Have Better Taste Than Most
If You Secretly Love These 10 Underrated Films You Probably Have Better Taste Than Most
Entertainment
9 Child Stars Who Were Pushed Out of Hollywood by Their Own Parents
9 Child Stars Who Were Pushed Out of Hollywood by Their Own Parents
Entertainment
The "Critics Were Wrong" List: 8 Films Panned at Release, Now Considered Classics
The “Critics Were Wrong” List: 8 Films Panned at Release, Now Considered Classics
Entertainment
The 7 Most Rewatched TV Episodes of All Time - and What Makes Them Impossible to Skip
The 7 Most Rewatched TV Episodes of All Time – and What Makes Them Impossible to Skip
Entertainment
10 Songs That Were Written in Under an Hour and Became the Defining Sound of a Decade
10 Songs That Were Written in Under an Hour and Became the Defining Sound of a Decade
Entertainment
Categories
Archives
July 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Jun    
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

Gun trainers say women and liberals are taking more interest in classes after Alex Pretti shooting
News

Women and Liberals Drive Firearm Training Boom After Federal Agents’ Fatal Shooting

February 11, 2026
Thunderstorms, hail to hit the Netherlands on Saturday afternoon
News

Netherlands Braces for Disruptive Thunderstorms and Hail Saturday

May 1, 2026
News

Las Vegas choose guidelines Margaret Rudin's wrongful conviction lawsuit can proceed as case hinges on innocence

March 3, 2025
2 arrested after ‘road rage’ incident on Las Vegas freeway off-ramp
News

Two Arrested Following Intense Road Rage Incident on Las Vegas Freeway Off-Ramp

July 2, 2025

Interested in working with us? Explore Advertising Opportunities.

© Las Vegas News. All Rights Reserved – Some articles are generated by AI.

A WD Strategies Brand.

Go to mobile version
Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?