ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月11日 10時03分


Agustina Rios Moya, 22, with her 5-year-old daughter in the ruins of their former house in #Llapallapani, Bolivia. The Uru-Murato are an indigenous group who for generations have lived off the waters of Lake Poopó, once #Bolivia’s second-largest. Lake Poopó was more than the Uru-Murato’s livelihood: It was their identity. The Uru-Murato were known to nearly everyone in the area as “the people of the lake.” But in December, after surviving decades of water diversion and cyclical El Niño droughts in the Andes, #LakePoop basically disappeared. “This is a millenarian culture that has been here since the start,” Carol Rocha Grimaldi, a Bolivian anthropologist, told the @ニューヨーク・タイムズ Andes bureau chief @caseysalbum. “But can the people of the lake exist without the lake?” The @ニューヨーク・タイムズ staff photographer @joshhaner took this photo of Agustina and her daughter while on #nytassignment in #Bolivia. Visit the link in our profile to read more about climate change claiming Lake Poopó, and the Uru-Murato identity. #nytweekender


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