The Amazon covers over 60% of Peru, but its wildest secret is the Shanay-Timpishka: a river so hot it boils small animals alive.
Tucked away in the central Huánuco region, this four-mile-long river has temperatures ranging from 112°F to nearly 200°F (45°C to 93°C). At its hottest points, the water produces thick clouds of steam and is hot enough to brew tea.
What makes the Boiling River truly exceptional is the geological mystery behind it. Typically, geothermal activity of this magnitude is found only in close proximity to active volcanoes, where magma heats the surrounding groundwater. However, the nearest active volcano to the Shanay-Timpishka is more than 400 miles away. Geologists have determined that the river is actually the result of a massive, non-volcanic hydrothermal system driven by fault lines. Rainwater falls high in the Andes mountains, sinks deep into the Earth's crust where it is heated by the planet's natural geothermal gradient, and is eventually thrust back up to the surface through deep tectonic cracks.
Local indigenous communities have known about the river for centuries, long before it gained international scientific attention. The name Shanay-Timpishka loosely translates to "boiled with the heat of the sun." The site is considered highly sacred, and local shamans incorporate the mineral-rich waters and heavy thermal vapors into their traditional practices.
The existence of a non-volcanic boiling river of this size highlights how much of the Amazon remains an unexplored frontier. Beyond the incredible biodiversity in the canopy overhead, the rainforest conceals complex, massive geological engines functioning deep underground.