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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/18/science/koepcke-diller-panguana-amazon-crash.htmlShe Fell Nearly 2 Miles, and Walked Away
At 17, biologist Juliane Diller was the sole survivor of a plane crash in the Amazon. Fifty years later she still runs Panguana, a research station founded by her parents in Peru.
June 18, 2021 Updated 1:06 p.m. ET
By Franz Lidz
Juliane Diller recently retired as deputy director of the Bavarian State Collection of Zoology in Munich. The next thing I knew, I was no longer inside the cabin, she recalled. I hadnt left the plane; the plane had left me. Credit...Laetitia Vancon for The New York Times
On the morning after Juliane Diller fell to earth, she awoke in the deep jungle of the Peruvian rainforest dazed with incomprehension. Just before noon on the previous day Christmas Eve, 1971 Juliane, then 17, and her mother had boarded a flight in Lima bound for Pucallpa, a rough-and-tumble port city along the Ucayali River. Her final destination was Panguana, a biological research station in the belly of the Amazon, where for three years she had lived, on and off, with her mother, Maria, and her father, Hans-Wilhelm Koepcke, both zoologists.
The flight was supposed to last less than an hour. About 25 minutes after takeoff, the plane, an 86-passenger Lockheed L-188A Electra turboprop, flew into a thunderstorm and began to shake. Overhead storage bins popped open, showering passengers and crew with luggage and Christmas presents.
My mother, who was sitting beside me, said, Hopefully, this goes all right, recalled Dr. Diller, who spoke by video from her home outside Munich, where she recently retired as deputy director of the Bavarian State Collection of Zoology. Though I could sense her nervousness, I managed to stay calm.
From a window seat in a back row, the teenager watched a bolt of lightning strike the planes right wing. She remembers the aircraft nose-diving and her mother saying, evenly, Now its all over. She remembers people weeping and screaming. And she remembers the thundering silence that followed. The aircraft had broken apart, separating her from everyone else onboard. The next thing I knew, I was no longer inside the cabin, Dr. Diller said. I was outside, in the open air. I hadnt left the plane; the plane had left me.
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secondwind
(16,903 posts)Arkansas Granny
(31,534 posts)onecaliberal
(32,903 posts)femmedem
(8,208 posts)"She estimates that as much as 17 percent of Amazonia has been deforested, and laments that vanishing ice, fluctuating rain patterns and global warming the average temperature at Panguana has risen by 4 degrees Celsius in the past 30 years are causing its wetlands to shrink. A recent study published in the journal Science Advances warned that the rainforest may be nearing a dangerous tipping point.
After 20 percent, there is no possibility of recovery, Dr. Diller said, grimly. You could expect a major forest dieback and a rather sudden evolution to something else, probably a degraded savanna. That would lead to a dramatic increase in greenhouse gas emissions, which is why the preservation of the Peruvian rainforest is so urgent and necessary.
summer_in_TX
(2,759 posts)LymphocyteLover
(5,657 posts)Damn, I can't imagine living down there and not doing everything I could to save that amazing place.
appalachiablue
(41,177 posts)Thanks, K/R
Hekate
(90,842 posts)Buckeye_Democrat
(14,858 posts)... with an older brother. It was one of the earliest movies that I can recall which kept me, a young child, totally engrossed by it.
I was so young and naive then, being surprised by a scene which showed flies bothering her wounds. My brother said they laid eggs in her wounds, and my reaction was like, "They do that?!"
So then I felt compelled to learn all the ways that nature could kill us.
Amazing story!