Lesson 13.1.1 · Departamento del Amazonas
🌳 Department of Amazonas
Colombia's southernmost department is 109,000 km² of rainforest, rivers, and indigenous nations — bigger than Portugal but home to fewer than 80,000 people. There are no roads in: you arrive by plane or by boat down the Amazon.
Sub-lessons
Break this lesson into focused chunks. Each sub-lesson has its own Memory Lab — active recall, mnemonics, elaboration, interleaved review, and shadowing — scoped to just those words.
The Basics
Capital: Leticia, on the Amazon River where Colombia, Brazil, and Peru meet. 11 municipalities, mostly tiny river towns. Spanish is the official language but Tikuna, Yagua, Huitoto, and Bora are spoken daily.
the jungle / rainforest
the river
border
History
Pre-Columbian Tikuna and Huitoto peoples lived along the river for millennia. The 1900s rubber boom (la fiebre del caucho) brought brutal exploitation by the Casa Arana. Leticia became Colombian only in 1922 after the Salomón-Lozano treaty with Peru.
rubber
indigenous person
treaty
Geography & Wildlife
Pure Amazon basin: hot (28–34 °C), humid, and pulsing with pink river dolphins, anacondas, jaguars, harpy eagles, and 700+ bird species. The river rises and falls 10 m a year — flooded forest is called várzea.
pink river dolphin
the flood / river rise
canoe
What to See
Leticia's malecón at sunset, Isla de los Micos (monkey island), Parque Nacional Amacayacu, Puerto Nariño (sustainable river town), Lago Tarapoto for dolphin spotting, and a quick border-hop to Tabatinga (Brazil) or Santa Rosa (Peru).
riverwalk
monkey
guide
Food of the River
Pirarucú (the world's largest scaled freshwater fish) grilled in banana leaf, gamitana frita, casabe (yuca flatbread), patarashca, juices of copoazú, arazá, and camu-camu. Mambe (toasted coca leaf) is sacred, not recreational.
pirarucu fish
cassava / manioc
copoazú fruit
Identity
Amazonenses speak softly, mix Portuguese loanwords (legal = cool), and live by the river's clock. Indigenous communities self-govern through cabildos. Respect protocols when visiting: ask permission, don't photograph elders without consent.
indigenous council
community
permission / excuse me
Memory lab
Five research-backed techniques — active recall, mnemonics, elaboration, interleaving, and production — applied to this lesson's vocabulary. Your progress trains a spaced-repetition schedule under the hood.
Force the answer from memory before peeking. The struggle is the workout — that's the testing effect.
Recall from English
permission / excuse me
Practice exercises
Test what stuck. Multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank — pulled live from this lesson's vocabulary.
la yuca
rubber
el tratado
the flood / river rise
el río
el malecón
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