Xingu River Basin

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The Xingu River, one of the primary tributaries of the Amazon, flows nearly 1,640 kilometers through central Brazil prior to joining the Amazon River. This river is extremely important because not only is it one of the largest clearwater rivers in the Amazon Basin, but many native communities rely on its resources as well. Over 14 tribes reside in the Xingu Indigenous park, while many other tribes and riverine communities are scattered along the rivers banks. While the basin is located far inland, its hydrological dynamics are deeply connected to global oceanic systems. The Xingu’s rainfall patterns, nutrient flows, and biodiversity depend on interactions between Atlantic Ocean currents and the Amazon’s massive evapotranspiration cycle, commonly referred to as the “flying rivers.” These airborne rivers of water vapor, generated by forest transpiration, travel thousands of kilometers before returning as rainfall that sustains the entire basin.

In recent decades, deforestation in the Xingu Basin has severely disrupted this water cycle. Large-scale soy farming, cattle ranching, and road construction have fragmented the forest, decreasing moisture recycling and altering rainfall timing. Many pesticides from large-scale agriculture have contaminated the groundwater around the basin, decreasing small-scale crop growth and communities access to clean water. This has affected the indigenous group’s ability to farm food to sustain their communities, such as yucca, peanuts, bananas, papayas, and corn. Scientists have linked these environmental changes not only to regional droughts but also to reduced freshwater discharge into the Atlantic. This matters on a global scale because the Amazon system supplies roughly one-fifth of all riverine freshwater entering the oceans. When the Xingu’s tributaries dry or flood unpredictably, the sediment and nutrient balance of the Atlantic coast shifts, influencing marine productivity and even the health of coral systems along Brazil’s northeastern shelf.

The construction of the Belo Monte Dam, one of the world’s largest hydroelectric projects, has further transformed the river’s flow. The dam diverts water from the Volta Grande (“Big Bend”) of the Xingu, negatively impacting aquatic habitats and affecting fish migration. Species such as the zebra pleco (Hypancistrus zebra), endemic to the Xingu’s rocky rapids, now face near extinction. The losses are not only ecological but also cultural, as the Indigenous communities rely heavily on seasonal fish cycles to sustain their population and continue traditions practiced for generations.

The Xingu Basin’s dilemma highlights the relationship between fresh, inland waters to oceanic processes. Freshwater systems supply the oceans with sediments, nutrients, and carbon, while oceanic climate patterns feed back through rain and humidity. Disruptions in one part of this cycle result in global consequences. Conservation of the Xingu Basin, therefore, is not just a local or national concern, but it is important in maintaining Earth’s oceanic equilibrium. Protecting its forests and river flows means protecting the atmospheric bridges that tie the continent to the sea.

Counter-Mapping Shipping: Digital Joy and Digital Labor in Oceanic Social Media

 

The Oceans Lab, an interdisciplinary research and advocacy initiative, explores maritime issues across oceanic spaces. With a focus on themes of race, labor, inequality, climate change, migration, and geopolitics, the Lab seeks to unravel the complexities of our oceans, making them comprehensible through innovative approaches. One such approach is the creation of this map that aims to help bridge gaps between how scholars describe oceanic spaces and the voices of those that inhabit them.

Inspired by global maritime shipping maps like marinetraffic.com, the Oceans Lab’s map is not just about tracing the trajectories of cargo ships; it is about weaving together interdisciplinary oceanic scholarship with the voices of those who inhabit the seas. It seeks to represent the various voices and ideas that converge to define the concept(s) of the ocean(s) from what may initially appear to be blank cartographic space. In the spirit of counter-mapping, we invite creators, scholars, and seafarers to use our submit button in order to actively participate in redefining how we perceive and understand oceanic spaces.

Counter-mapping, at its core, seeks to provide alternative perspectives and representations that challenge dominant power structures and dominant narratives (Peluso 1995). This ever-evolving map thus recognizes that the ocean is not just a backdrop for the global commerce represented on standard shipping maps, but a vibrant and dynamic space shaped by human experiences.

In addition to showcasing the multifaceted nature of oceanic life, the map brings to the fore the concept of digital labor and attention economies. In the digital age, content creation and the curation of online personas have become forms of labor, often underestimated and overlooked. Those at sea who engage in social media share not only their experiences participating in the shipping economy, but also contribute to the attention economy. In addition to including these digital contributions in scholarly conversations, the map hopes to open up questions about this digital labor, underscoring the importance of recognizing it within the broader context of oceanic scholarship.




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Send us your name, a short essay, a short story, a photo, a video, or a link to a social media post related to the sea or maritime issues (TikToks at sea are welcome, as are research essays!). We aim to fill our map with “stories from the sea” of all kinds.