Winner of the Fall 2018 StMU History Media Award for
Best Article in the Category of “Latin American History”
In the city of Lima, it is traditional for grandparents to tell stories to their grandsons at family dinner gatherings. One grandson, who heard a story handed down through many generations, is named Andrés Ruzo. When he was little, his grandparents told him stories about the Spanish and their conquest of Peru. One of those stories told that after the Incas had been conquered by the Spanish, the conquerors had grown rich and powerful, because of the huge amounts of gold they had taken from the Incas. But some of those men just wanted more, so they went into towns asking the Incas, “Where can we get more gold?” With their land usurped and their people slaughtered, the Inca wanted vengeance. They told the greedy conquistadors to go to the Amazon and search for a city made out of gold that they called Paititi (“El Dorado” in Spanish and “The Golden One” in English).1 The Amazon, the largest tropical forest in the world, has an area of seven million square kilometers and goes through five Latin-American countries, but mostly through Brazil and Peru.2
The likelihood of someone having built a city of gold in this treacherous area was slim, but the avarice of the Spaniards was too great. The few men that ultimately returned from the Amazon told stories of shamans, warriors that used arrows, man-eating beasts, and the most scientifically curious aspect of this story: a river that boiled and emitted gusts of vapor.3
Twelve years later, Andrés Ruzo had become a geoscientist at the Southern Methodist University, in Dallas, Texas. While he was working on his Ph.D. at SMU, and trying to understand Peru’s geothermal energy potential–the thermal energy stored in the earth–he remembered the stories his grandfather had told him. He thought about them many times, but the best science of the time suggested that the existence of a boiling river in the largest tropical forest in the world, which was also far from a powerful heat source, was inconceivable. He wanted to confirm his suspicions for himself, so he asked professors, students, oil, gas, and mining companies about it, but they all seemed to agree that the existence of a boiling river in a zone where there are no volcanoes is impossible.4
Ruzo returned to Peru in 2011 to see his family. At a family dinner, his aunt told him that the river was real and that she had swam there. While arguing with his aunt about it, his uncle got into the conversation, agreed with her, and added that there was a shaman protecting the river. Motivated by the curiosity, Ruzo made a choice. He decided to go into the vast region of the Amazon and see for himself whether that part of the story was true or not. Because if it was true, it could become a discovery of the highest order.5
Finally, after more than two hours and forty-five minutes of travel, he was in the Amazon. Almost seven hundred kilometers away from the nearest volcanic center, he started hiking, and as he went deeper into the region, he started noticing some vapor coming from some of the trees. He went deeper until he stopped, stunned by what was in front of him; he ran into what seemed to be a shaman almost fully surrounded by vapor. He took his thermometer and the average temperature of the river was 86 degrees Celsius. After talking with this man for a while, he discovers that the man was the shaman’s apprentice. He was told that the shaman was in charge of protecting the river and that the place where he was standing was the land of the “Yacumama,” a giant snake spirit that was the mother of waters. It was a snake who creates hot and cold streams. Surprisingly, the point where the hot and cold streams mix is underneath one big rock formation that has the shape of a snake’s head, covered with moss and surrounded by vegetation.6
In describing the fulfilling experience of discovering the boiling river, Ruzo states: “This is becoming one of the greatest adventures of my life. This will be the story I tell my children and grandchildren—and every action I make at this moment adds a new piece of the story. Every passing second now seems to hold a greater significance. Burning-hot water splashes on my right arm. I sit up, pulling my arm to my chest, no longer lost in thought. I recall my professor’s words from volcanology field school: ‘the people who die on volcanoes are the inexperienced who are also ignorant of the dangers and the experts who have forgotten they are dangerous.’ I stand, make sure I have a firm footing and jump back onto the nearest shore. As I look back at the boiling river I can’t suppress an excited whisper: this place exists. This place actually exists. I remember the shaman saying the river has called me here for a purpose, and I can feel a greater mission about to take place.”7
The river started as a cold stream and continued hotter underneath the Yacumama. So the legend was pretty accurate. The data showed that the river was independent of any volcanic source. Ruzo asked how that could be possible? He asked many geothermal experts and volcanologists for years, but he still hasn’t been able to explain the reason for the temperatures, nor find another phenomenon like this. Shanay-Timpishka flows hot for 6.24 kilometers, it gets up to 25 meters wide and its temperature ranges from 25 to more than 90 degrees Celsius depending on what part of the river you are measuring. The river’s hottest temperature is almost twice as hot as a hot cup of coffee. The boiling river is an amazing and unique phenomenon, but it is also very dangerous. At 47 degrees Celsius, any creature that dares to get inside the water meets his last moments. Ruzo explained that he saw a toad fall into the waters and his body started cooking. Every minute inside that it spent struggling to get out, it got more tired until water entered his mouth and started cooking the toad from the inside. At the hottest section of the river, small animals are cooked in a matter of seconds.8
The boiling river is a beautiful and dangerous site, and it is a mystery for geoscientists to explain. We are still waiting for it to be solved. It is the largest boiling river in existence that we know of, but for the surrounding community, it is a natural resource. People cook and drink from the river; its water is clean and somewhat tasty. The river is considered so precious that Ruzo needed to talk to the shaman and receive his approval to study the river, with the condition of returning the water. The river is located in an exploitable jungle, and there are no specific laws that protect it. After the shaman said he saw no evil intentions within the young scientist, Ruzo was ready for some information gathering. He first needed to get a full image of the river, so he contacted Google Earth to get one by satellite. He later found its name: Shanay-Timpishka, which means “Boiled with the Heat of the Sun.” He was aided by National Geographic grants and started his own geophysical and geothermal studies on the river in 2011.9
After discovering one of the largest thermal rivers in the world, Ruzo published his findings, and he is now credited for making more widely known the existence of this phenomenon. With the help from his colleagues from National Geographic, Dr. Spencer Wells, and from UC Davis, Dr. Jon Eisen, he discovered new lifeforms, new species living inside the river. Apart from that, he also gathered some data indicating the presence of a large hydrothermal system (the deeper into the earth, the hotter), but he still needs more research in order to discover the exact reason for its temperatures. Since the discovery is recent, there’s not much information about the new species.10
Ruzo now understands that the shaman and the people living there kept the river a secret because it is just another piece of unprotected land waiting to be exploited by the illegal loggers and the government. Additionally, one of Ruzo’s main points for the protection of the river is its “significance,” which can be summarized in two aspects. The first is its cultural significance. It is part of Peru’s natural history and according to the shaman, it is a center of shamanic learning and a source of knowledge. The second is its geological significance. The river is huge and it is different from any other boiling river. Depending on the results, this could become a great contribution to geoscience.11
After five years of research, Ruzo has set the goal of ensuring that whoever controls the river is going to respect it and understand its “importance and uniqueness.” He is now spreading the message of “significance” in his book The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in the Amazon, and in boilingriver.org, which is a nonprofit organization created in 2016 that seeks to protect the river, spread the message of its significance, and provide information gathered by his research. Andrés Ruzo is an example of how useful it is to remember the stories of one’s heritage; these tales may not be concrete knowledge or facts, but they can certainly lead to amazing discoveries that may not have been found any other way.12
- Andres Ruzo, “How I Found a Mythical Boiling River in the Amazon” (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2016), 6-12. ↵
- The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.v. “Amazon River”. ↵
- Andres Ruzo, “The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in The Amazon,” YouTube video, 15:49, posted by TED, February 23, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4N2SxUZwiU&t=604s. ↵
- Andres Ruzo, How I Found a Mythical Boiling River in the Amazon (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2016), 13-17. ↵
- Andres Ruzo, “The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in The Amazon”, YouTube video, 15:49, posted by TED, February 23, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4N2SxUZwiU&t=604s. ↵
- Andres Ruzo, How I Found a Mythical Boiling River in the Amazon (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2016), 76-86. ↵
- Andrés Ruzo, How I Found a Mythical Boiling River in the Amazon (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2016), 1-2. ↵
- Andres Ruzo, “The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in The Amazon”, YouTube video, 15:49, posted by TED, February 23, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4N2SxUZwiU&t=604s. ↵
- Simon Worrall, “This River Kills Everything that Falls into it. Legend or fact? A young explorer that traveled deep into a remote jungle to find out,” National Geographic, March 13, 2016. Accessed September 9, 2018, https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/03/160313-boiling-river-amazon-geothermal-science-conservation-ngbooktalk. ↵
- Andrés Ruzo, “The Boiling River Project,” Lumen Foundation, 2016, Accessed September 9, 2018, http://www.boilingriver.org. ↵
- Kelley McMillan, “A Boiling River Flows Through the Amazon. Can it be Saved?”, National Geographic, February 18, 2016. Accessed September 8, 2018, https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/adventure-blog/2016/02/18/this-mythical-river-in-peru-is-boiling-and-one-young-scientist-is-on-a-quest-to-protect-it/. ↵
- Andres Ruzo. “The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in The Amazon,” YouTube video, 15:49, posted by TED, February 23, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4N2SxUZwiU&t=604s. ↵
121 comments
Tessa Bodukoglu
this was a very interesting read. the article was very well written and the flow was very good. grandparents always tell their grandkids stories. you never think their real just because they seem too good to be true, but to have some of those stories come to life and have truth backed up behind it, is amazing.
Rebecca Campos
This is such an interesting concept that I would have never thought to research about before. The fact that the temperature range is from 25 to 90 degrees celsius is absurd. It begs the question as to whether the drastic temperature changes could be the fault of man’s destruction to the planet or not. Hopefully, the protection of the river is further carried out and people will take better care of not only this river, but all the other natural environments on the planet.
Maisie Favila
This was such a cool topic to learn about, especially since I didn’t have any previous knowledge of this ‘boiling river’. There was such a cool transition from two different POV’s and it gave me an even clearer view on what was happening. The passion Ruzo had when trying to prove this rivers existence was crazy. At first when I read the title, I thought it would be an exaggeration when ‘cooking creatures alive’ was mentioned, so it was even more fascinating to discover it was very much real.
Nathan Hartley
I didn’t expect this article to be told in such an interesting way. I was intrigued by the name of the article, and the story format made me like the article even more interesting. It blows my mind that there is a river out there that is hot enough to boil the animals alive that swim in it.
Madeline Torres
I absolutely loved the way the article was told in a more story telling form. It made everything that much more interesting. Overall, this article made me want to research a lot more into the boiling river because I have never heard of this before. I enjoyed the amount of details given with the amount of story telling in the article. Overall, very well written and very interesting! It’s great to learn about the many mysteries our Earth holds. It was amazing to learn that something this strange actually exist in our nature.
Luisa Ortiz
I LOVE how you started the article from a family perspective and later to the science! I was drowned by the title and at first, I thought it was just a legend and I even ask my Peruvian friends if they knew about this tale, surprisingly they do not know anything about the river. Great job on the pictures, I truly enjoy your article and the way it is witting, is fascinating and educational.
Faten Al Shaibi
I liked the author’s way of telling the story, and I felt the suspense to complete the subject until its end.
I loved Ruzo’s insistence on discovering the existence of this river and proving it to the world, it is very strange phenomenon,the heat emitted from the river, I wish to visit it someday, I hope that the river remains as it is and that the human hand does not interfere in any way in turning it into a field of experiments.Because what distinguishes is its existence it’s naturally.
Raymond Munoz
This article is a great demonstration of the author’s ability to tell a story and give just the right amount of details. At first, I was a little lost in the beginning with the switch from family story telling to science, but after reading the whole article I understood that as a reader I needed that little bit of context from the introduction to fully appreciate the boiling river’s significance. In the article it is mentioned that the river was just recently discovered, but I would think that researchers like Ruzo would be hard at work to get the area legally protected. Now, Ruzo and other researchers may be working on getting the river protected and it just wasn’t mentioned in the article, but if they aren’t then I hope that someone does get the river legally protected before someone disrespectful and/or unethical comes along and disturbs the peace.
Greyson Addicott
After reading the article, I have to give the author props for his ability to create such an interesting narrative around a heated stream of water. Rovo, the explorer, must have felt like an explorer of old, pushing deep into nature and documenting his findings. If the article didn’t explain the cause behind the river, I still believe that it would have held the same weight. All in all, it was a very informative and enjoyable read!
Diego Aguilera
I really enjoyed this article as it showed me a lot I didn’t know about something so cool! My favorite part is learning why this water is boiling and how it was created. Another part I liked is how the author describes how far this boiling water area goes back in time. The article was very informative and in fact something I would do more research to learn more myself.