Questões de Vestibular UNESP 2013 para Vestibular - Segundo Semestre
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Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest
By Channtal Fleischfresser
February 11, 2013
Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli
Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.
The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.
The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.
(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)
(Marcelo Rede. A Mesopotâmia, 2002.)
Entre os trabalhos forçados a que o texto se refere, podemos mencionar a
(Marc Bloch. A sociedade feudal, 1987.)
O mais importante dos deveres que, na sociedade feudal, o vassalo tinha em relação ao seu senhor era:
Com a vinda da Corte, pela primeira vez, desde o início da colonização, configuravam-se nos trópicos portugueses preocupações próprias de uma colônia de povoamento e não apenas de exploração ou feitoria comercial, pois que no Rio teriam que viver e, para sobreviver, explorar “os enormes recursos naturais” e as potencialidades do Império nascente, tendo em vista o fomento do bem-estar da própria população local.
(Maria Odila Leite da Silva Dias.
A interiorização da metrópole e outros estudos, 2005.)
Com a vinda da Corte, pela primeira vez, desde o início da colonização, configuravam-se nos trópicos portugueses preocupações próprias de uma colônia de povoamento e não apenas de exploração ou feitoria comercial, pois que no Rio teriam que viver e, para sobreviver, explorar “os enormes recursos naturais” e as potencialidades do Império nascente, tendo em vista o fomento do bem-estar da própria população local.
(Maria Odila Leite da Silva Dias.
A interiorização da metrópole e outros estudos, 2005.)
As redes de comércio, os fortes costeiros, as relações tecidas ao longo dos séculos entre comerciantes europeus e chefes africanos, continuaram a ser o sustentáculo do fornecimento de mercadorias para os europeus, só que agora estas não eram mais pessoas, e sim matérias-primas.
(Marina de Mello e Souza. África e Brasil africano, 2007.)
O texto refere-se à redefinição das relações comerciais entre europeus e africanos, ocorrida quando
(Lilia Moritz Schwarcz. Retrato em branco e negro, 1987.)
A redução da importância do trabalho escravo, ocorrida após 1870, deveu-se, entre outros fatores,