When these pictures were taken, in 1984, Varig ran nonstop flights from Miami to Manaus. Things change fast in the airline world: in 2014 the route was flown by American and TAM.
Riverboats tied up at a floating dock on the Rio Negro. Why floating? You'll see in a minute.
Heading up river or down: soft drinks and manioc flour.
Here's why the dock floats.
Looks like the range is close to 20 feet; it's actually twice that.
A branch of the Igarapé dos Educandos, one of several streams that enter the Negro.
Settlement encroaches on one of these seasonally flooded ravines. In high water, the scene must turn into a village in a lake.
The municipal market, on the waterfront.
Another side of the market.
The city's historic wealth is largely a story of rubber, an industry decimated when the industry shifted from wild trees, scattered in the forest, to densely planted groves of trees established as plantations in Southeast Asia.
The icon of Manaus, its opera house, was built during the rubber boom. Seeds from the indigenous rubber tree was smuggled out and taken to Kew Gardens and from there to Malaya. Collectors of sap from trees in the widely scattered Amazon forest could not compete with the owners of monocultural plantations.
The central shopping area.
A very smart furniture store.
Early morning at a downtown street market.
On the east side of town, Manaus has a duty-free industrial district. Established in 1967, the Manaus Industrial Park by 2004 produced $10 billion worth of products, of which $1.3 billion were exported, mostly to the United States. Among the 300 companies operating in the zone were Nokia, Minolta, LG, Sony, Xerox, Samsung, Panasonic, and Kodak—and that's just electronics. The chief exports were cell phones, color TVs, and motorcycles. Motorcycles? On the list of manufacturing companies, along with Honda and Yamaha, was Harley-Davidson.
Farther outside town, the equatorial rainforest has been cleared for pastures that have become little short of internationally notorious amidst rising concerns about biodiversity and climate change.
Outside town, social institutions like this school are strained; ecological concerns come a distant second to economic ones.
Roadside stop: a girl whacks the top off a coconut. The "water" sells for about a dime.
Yarded logs from the surrounding forest.
Ferry lineup to cross the Amazon, a few miles south of town. The confluence of the Amazon and Negro is marked by the line separating the dark waters of the Negro from the lighter ones of the Amazon, both flowing toward the left.