Foram encontradas 40 questões.
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guarani Missões-RS
Spectacular fossil fish reveal a critical period of evolution
Before animals crawled out of the sea and spread onto land, the appearance of jaws marked a significant time in the development of nearly all living vertebrates, including humans.
Over hundreds of millions of years, chance and survival have sculpted an extraordinary menagerie of vertebrate life that on land, in the air, and in the water. Vertebrates are animals with spinal columns, including humans, and arguably the single biggest step in vertebrate evolutionary history - even more significant than our distant aquatic forebears’ first waddles onto land - is something we may take for granted: the evolution of the jaw.
From vocalizing to biting food, the jaw is essential to the survival of 99.8 percent of living vertebrates. Only a precious few animals with spines, such as lampreys and hagfish, have made it to modern times without these hinged mouth structures.
The rich story of how jawed vertebrates spread to all corners of the globe - a saga some 450 million years - has long been missing the first few pages. But now rocks in western China have yielded spectacular fossils that show us some of this story’s earliest characters: jawed fish that are the oldest skeletons of their kind ever found. Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates, including bones and teeth from fish to have lived between 439 million and 436 million years ago, tens of millions of years before animals moved onto land.
The new studies’ fossils are remarkably complete. Remains found in China’s Chongqing municipality include a new inch-long close cousin to sharks, as well as a newfound type of early armored fish. In addition, fossils found farther south in the province of Guizhou include the spines of an ancient shark cousin and the oldest known teeth of a jawed vertebrate - tiny semicircular arcs of pointy teeth, barely a few millimeters across.
Taken together, the material “shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history,” says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at Uppsala University in Sweden who co-authored one of the four studies. “We’ve known it’s existed, we’ve known it’s really important, but we haven’t had any direct evidence for it basically at all - and then suddenly, boom, here it comes.”
(Fonte: National Geographic - adaptado.)
Considering the Literature in English language as a whole, mark the alternative that characterizes a plot:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guarani Missões-RS
Spectacular fossil fish reveal a critical period of evolution
Before animals crawled out of the sea and spread onto land, the appearance of jaws marked a significant time in the development of nearly all living vertebrates, including humans.
Over hundreds of millions of years, chance and survival have sculpted an extraordinary menagerie of vertebrate life that on land, in the air, and in the water. Vertebrates are animals with spinal columns, including humans, and arguably the single biggest step in vertebrate evolutionary history - even more significant than our distant aquatic forebears’ first waddles onto land - is something we may take for granted: the evolution of the jaw.
From vocalizing to biting food, the jaw is essential to the survival of 99.8 percent of living vertebrates. Only a precious few animals with spines, such as lampreys and hagfish, have made it to modern times without these hinged mouth structures.
The rich story of how jawed vertebrates spread to all corners of the globe - a saga some 450 million years - has long been missing the first few pages. But now rocks in western China have yielded spectacular fossils that show us some of this story’s earliest characters: jawed fish that are the oldest skeletons of their kind ever found. Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates, including bones and teeth from fish to have lived between 439 million and 436 million years ago, tens of millions of years before animals moved onto land.
The new studies’ fossils are remarkably complete. Remains found in China’s Chongqing municipality include a new inch-long close cousin to sharks, as well as a newfound type of early armored fish. In addition, fossils found farther south in the province of Guizhou include the spines of an ancient shark cousin and the oldest known teeth of a jawed vertebrate - tiny semicircular arcs of pointy teeth, barely a few millimeters across.
Taken together, the material “shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history,” says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at Uppsala University in Sweden who co-authored one of the four studies. “We’ve known it’s existed, we’ve known it’s really important, but we haven’t had any direct evidence for it basically at all - and then suddenly, boom, here it comes.”
(Fonte: National Geographic - adaptado.)
According to the text, mark the CORRECT alternative:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guarani Missões-RS
Spectacular fossil fish reveal a critical period of evolution
Before animals crawled out of the sea and spread onto land, the appearance of jaws marked a significant time in the development of nearly all living vertebrates, including humans.
Over hundreds of millions of years, chance and survival have sculpted an extraordinary menagerie of vertebrate life that on land, in the air, and in the water. Vertebrates are animals with spinal columns, including humans, and arguably the single biggest step in vertebrate evolutionary history - even more significant than our distant aquatic forebears’ first waddles onto land - is something we may take for granted: the evolution of the jaw.
From vocalizing to biting food, the jaw is essential to the survival of 99.8 percent of living vertebrates. Only a precious few animals with spines, such as lampreys and hagfish, have made it to modern times without these hinged mouth structures.
The rich story of how jawed vertebrates spread to all corners of the globe - a saga some 450 million years - has long been missing the first few pages. But now rocks in western China have yielded spectacular fossils that show us some of this story’s earliest characters: jawed fish that are the oldest skeletons of their kind ever found. Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates, including bones and teeth from fish to have lived between 439 million and 436 million years ago, tens of millions of years before animals moved onto land.
The new studies’ fossils are remarkably complete. Remains found in China’s Chongqing municipality include a new inch-long close cousin to sharks, as well as a newfound type of early armored fish. In addition, fossils found farther south in the province of Guizhou include the spines of an ancient shark cousin and the oldest known teeth of a jawed vertebrate - tiny semicircular arcs of pointy teeth, barely a few millimeters across.
Taken together, the material “shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history,” says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at Uppsala University in Sweden who co-authored one of the four studies. “We’ve known it’s existed, we’ve known it’s really important, but we haven’t had any direct evidence for it basically at all - and then suddenly, boom, here it comes.”
(Fonte: National Geographic - adaptado.)
Concerning the parts of speech, the word underlined in “Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates…” is classified as:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guarani Missões-RS
Spectacular fossil fish reveal a critical period of evolution
Before animals crawled out of the sea and spread onto land, the appearance of jaws marked a significant time in the development of nearly all living vertebrates, including humans.
Over hundreds of millions of years, chance and survival have sculpted an extraordinary menagerie of vertebrate life that on land, in the air, and in the water. Vertebrates are animals with spinal columns, including humans, and arguably the single biggest step in vertebrate evolutionary history - even more significant than our distant aquatic forebears’ first waddles onto land - is something we may take for granted: the evolution of the jaw.
From vocalizing to biting food, the jaw is essential to the survival of 99.8 percent of living vertebrates. Only a precious few animals with spines, such as lampreys and hagfish, have made it to modern times without these hinged mouth structures.
The rich story of how jawed vertebrates spread to all corners of the globe - a saga some 450 million years - has long been missing the first few pages. But now rocks in western China have yielded spectacular fossils that show us some of this story’s earliest characters: jawed fish that are the oldest skeletons of their kind ever found. Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates, including bones and teeth from fish to have lived between 439 million and 436 million years ago, tens of millions of years before animals moved onto land.
The new studies’ fossils are remarkably complete. Remains found in China’s Chongqing municipality include a new inch-long close cousin to sharks, as well as a newfound type of early armored fish. In addition, fossils found farther south in the province of Guizhou include the spines of an ancient shark cousin and the oldest known teeth of a jawed vertebrate - tiny semicircular arcs of pointy teeth, barely a few millimeters across.
Taken together, the material “shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history,” says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at Uppsala University in Sweden who co-authored one of the four studies. “We’ve known it’s existed, we’ve known it’s really important, but we haven’t had any direct evidence for it basically at all - and then suddenly, boom, here it comes.”
(Fonte: National Geographic - adaptado.)
In “[…]shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history […]”, the underlined word can be substituted without loss of meaning by:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: OBJETIVA
Orgão: Pref. Guarani Missões-RS
Spectacular fossil fish reveal a critical period of evolution
Before animals crawled out of the sea and spread onto land, the appearance of jaws marked a significant time in the development of nearly all living vertebrates, including humans.
Over hundreds of millions of years, chance and survival have sculpted an extraordinary menagerie of vertebrate life that on land, in the air, and in the water. Vertebrates are animals with spinal columns, including humans, and arguably the single biggest step in vertebrate evolutionary history - even more significant than our distant aquatic forebears’ first waddles onto land - is something we may take for granted: the evolution of the jaw.
From vocalizing to biting food, the jaw is essential to the survival of 99.8 percent of living vertebrates. Only a precious few animals with spines, such as lampreys and hagfish, have made it to modern times without these hinged mouth structures.
The rich story of how jawed vertebrates spread to all corners of the globe - a saga some 450 million years - has long been missing the first few pages. But now rocks in western China have yielded spectacular fossils that show us some of this story’s earliest characters: jawed fish that are the oldest skeletons of their kind ever found. Across four papers published in the journal Nature, a team of Chinese paleontologists and international collaborators describes sites that preserve astoundingly complete fossils of these earliest known jawed vertebrates, including bones and teeth from fish to have lived between 439 million and 436 million years ago, tens of millions of years before animals moved onto land.
The new studies’ fossils are remarkably complete. Remains found in China’s Chongqing municipality include a new inch-long close cousin to sharks, as well as a newfound type of early armored fish. In addition, fossils found farther south in the province of Guizhou include the spines of an ancient shark cousin and the oldest known teeth of a jawed vertebrate - tiny semicircular arcs of pointy teeth, barely a few millimeters across.
Taken together, the material “shows us for the first time a chunk of our own evolutionary history,” says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at Uppsala University in Sweden who co-authored one of the four studies. “We’ve known it’s existed, we’ve known it’s really important, but we haven’t had any direct evidence for it basically at all - and then suddenly, boom, here it comes.”
(Fonte: National Geographic - adaptado.)
Check the alternative that CORRECTLY fills the gaps in the text:
Provas
Em relação ao processo de tradução, assinalar a alternativa CORRETA:
Provas
Em relação ao ensino-aprendizagem de língua estrangeira, assinalar a alternativa CORRETA:
Provas
De acordo com a Base Nacional Comum Curricular (BNCC) - Língua Inglesa: Ensino Fundamental, a BNCC prioriza o foco da:
Provas
Considerando-se o problema da evasão escolar, marcar C para as afirmativas Certas, E para as Erradas e, após, assinalar a alternativa que apresenta a sequência CORRETA:
(_) A evasão escolar é produto do fracasso de uma escola que surgiu com o objetivo de promover melhorias nas condições de vida da sociedade e acaba por excluir e marginalizar milhares de jovens.
(_) A evasão é influenciada exclusivamente por fatores externos, capazes de desestimular o aluno, uma vez que a escola é o local de acolhimento.
(_) Deve ser encarada como uma falha do aluno, algo proposital, visto que o professor e a escola não têm interferência nesse processo.
(_) Testes/avaliações mal elaborados e autoritarismo são fatores que influenciam no que se refere à permanência e terminalidade educativa dos alunos que tiveram acesso à escola.
Provas
- LegislaçãoDiretrizes Curriculares NacionaisDiretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a Educação Básica
- LegislaçãoLei 9.394/1996: Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional
Considerando-se a Educação Especial, em conformidade com as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais Gerais para a Educação Básica, assinalar a alternativa que preenche as lacunas abaixo CORRETAMENTE:
A Educação Especial é uma modalidade de ensino a todas as etapas e outras modalidades, como parte integrante da educação , devendo ser prevista no projeto político-pedagógico da unidade escolar.
Provas
Caderno Container