This luxe book of photography traces National Geographic explorer Thomas Peschak’s unprecedented expedition across the Amazon from source to the sea, revealing the incredible secrets of this vital waterway.
For decades, the rainforests that blanket South America have overshadowed the world’s greatest river: the Amazon. A web of more than 1,000 streams and tributaries collectively spawning an enormous water world larger than the continental United States, it is home to thousands of species of fish, aquatic reptiles, mammals, and birds—most found nowhere else on Earth.
In these dazzling pages, acclaimed photographer Thomas Peschak reveals for the first time the astonishing worlds nestled between the Andes Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean. Loosely following the flow of the river from 17,000 feet to the mouth 4,000 miles downstream, he captures astonishing biodiversity, novel wildlife behavior and unique ecologies of rarely glimpsed species.
Equal parts photojournalism and art, this lavish book will take readers on a breathtaking visual journey to one of the wildest places left on the planet.
THOMAS PESCHAK is a National Geographic photographer, explorer and marine biologist, who specializes in documenting the beauty and fragility of the world’s last wild places. He has produced 23 stories for National Geographic magazine covering a wide array of natural history and conservation issues, from the Galápagos Islands to the Kalahari Desert.
A veteran of over 50 expeditions to some of the most remote and extreme corners of the world, on Instagram he inspires his audience of over 1.1 million people with tales from the conservation frontlines, trying to save endangered wildlife and critical habitats.
The author of eight books, Peschak has won 20 Wildlife Photographer of the Year and six World Press Photo Awards. He is a popular speaker for National Geographic Live!, having presented shows in over 15 cities on three continents. His official TED talk, "Dive Into an Ocean Photographer’s World," has been viewed more than one million times.
This luxe book of photography traces National Geographic explorer Thomas Peschak’s unprecedented expedition across the Amazon from source to the sea, revealing the incredible secrets of this vital waterway.
For decades, the rainforests that blanket South America have overshadowed the world’s greatest river: the Amazon. A web of more than 1,000 streams and tributaries collectively spawning an enormous water world larger than the continental United States, it is home to thousands of species of fish, aquatic reptiles, mammals, and birds—most found nowhere else on Earth.
In these dazzling pages, acclaimed photographer Thomas Peschak reveals for the first time the astonishing worlds nestled between the Andes Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean. Loosely following the flow of the river from 17,000 feet to the mouth 4,000 miles downstream, he captures astonishing biodiversity, novel wildlife behavior and unique ecologies of rarely glimpsed species.
Equal parts photojournalism and art, this lavish book will take readers on a breathtaking visual journey to one of the wildest places left on the planet.
Creators
THOMAS PESCHAK is a National Geographic photographer, explorer and marine biologist, who specializes in documenting the beauty and fragility of the world’s last wild places. He has produced 23 stories for National Geographic magazine covering a wide array of natural history and conservation issues, from the Galápagos Islands to the Kalahari Desert.
A veteran of over 50 expeditions to some of the most remote and extreme corners of the world, on Instagram he inspires his audience of over 1.1 million people with tales from the conservation frontlines, trying to save endangered wildlife and critical habitats.
The author of eight books, Peschak has won 20 Wildlife Photographer of the Year and six World Press Photo Awards. He is a popular speaker for National Geographic Live!, having presented shows in over 15 cities on three continents. His official TED talk, "Dive Into an Ocean Photographer’s World," has been viewed more than one million times.