Zhou Yuan pulled out his Opple smartphone and opened the international map for positioning.
Currently located in the Amazon Rainforest in South America.
He switched the time to local time. It was 5:36 p.m. now; in another 30 to 60 minutes, it should be dark.
The time wasn't too ample. Zhou Yuan knew he had to act quickly, so he glanced around.
The Amazon Tropical Rainforest accounted for half of the world's rainforest area, 20% of the forest area, and was the largest and most diverse tropical rainforest globally, known as the "lungs of the earth."
The biodiversity in the rainforest was outstanding, gathering 2.5 million species of insects, tens of thousands of plant species, and approximately 2,000 bird and mammal species, thus known as the "kingdom of the world's flora and fauna."
The surrounding trees were mostly tropical evergreen and deciduous broadleaf trees, generally over thirty meters high, with dense, tall crowns interwoven together, forming a green sky.