miamiherald.com
Jul 24, 2008
The people of the Andean mountain range have long seen the condor as more than just a big bird. With a wingspan stretching up to 10 feet and a cruising altitude higher than 16,000 feet above sea level, this majestic creature was considered a supernatural being, a source of national pride and even an immortal divinity. Today, however, the Andean condor is in danger of becoming nothing more than a myth. Expanding human development in the Andes Mountains, which stretch down the length of South America, has upset the delicate balance of food that the condor depends on to survive, and the consequences have been drastic. The condor has become virtually extinct in Venezuela and is highly endangered in Colombia and Ecuador, in the continent's north. The bird is considered endangered in Peru and Bolivia, farther down the Andes, and...
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