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An iGEM team outreach goes to Amazon (we mean..

inner Amazon) Our team went to an adventure in the rainforest; we went to Manicor, a municipality located in the south-east of the Brazilian state of Amazonas. Its population is about 48,000 souls (2012) and its area is 48,282 km. As all little towns in Amazon rainforest its inhabitants are from small satellite communities. The town itself has half of the population we mentioned before. The origin of Manicor name is from the river that has the same name, one of the main affluent of Madeira River, itself one of the most important arms of the might Amazon River. The name Manicor stands for an old Indian tribe that inhabited the region before the colonization from Portuguese.
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Municipality of Manicor

To get there we traveled about 400Km toward south and spend twelve hours through a nice and bumpy highway: the river Madeira. Yes, weve made by boat! These are the truly highways in Amazon.
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Our route from Manaus to Manicor: ~400km away

We joined another group also working at University of Amazonas from Chemistry department, participating with then in the

event

called:

Unveiling

the

Forensic

Science.

Since

our

Electrobacter-iGEM project is about (also) environment, as we are proposing a system that reduces used frying oil spills, we fitted in their Environment Forensic Science, cool isnt? So, for first weve made lots new friends from our own University!

And after see the stunning and beautiful Amazonian landscapes and sunrise and sunset we finally reach the target! What trip!
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iGEM team and Chemistry department working together and havin photo together in Manicor. Good times!

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Opening cerimony

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We had a municipal high school to occupy and give three day course with dynamics and practicum for the students from Manicor and surroundings. We have more than 300 students participating in the whole thing counting the three days. We made some plays; DNA

extraction from onion, banana, pineapple; talked about the used frying oil environmental issues and legislation about it; and of

course we talked a lot how SynBio can solve this in the future, therefore we spread the news about iGEM, our participation in the competition and how it works. On the boat again. In the last day we get together with about 40 students in a twodeck regional boat and we talked about the importance of the hydrological system in Amazon and other tropical rainforest in the world (nothing better than do this inside a boat!), and our dependency from these waters and ecosystems. We also stressed the point about the use of used frying oil and the threats of it in the way we humans are doing.
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It was a wonderful experience and made us feel more Amazonians than ever. We learned a lot and now we can say in a practical way that science and education can transform lives and synthetic biology is applicable and feasible for real world problems.

Besides, people over there have so much to be heard that we could improve our way of doing research, but this is other text to be written. Thanks for all that participate on that educational adventure...Its time to get on the boat once again and come back home
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