6 resultados para Colonial Brazil

em Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual da Universidade de São Paulo


Relevância:

70.00% 70.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

O texto versa sobre o papel dos mestres-construtores na produção da arquitetura nas vilas e cidades coloniais brasileiras, focalizando o sistema de empreitada em etapas e o papel dos riscos e traças na concepção, execução, louvação e prestação de contas das edificações. Questiona a ideia de autoria única, apontando atores e assinaturas múltiplas. Analisa os conhecimentos necessários, especialmente relacionados à geometria prática, discutindo a relação dialética entre teoria e prática, e as fronteiras tênues entre erudição e costume.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A exploração do Brasil-Colônia pelos portugueses, franceses e holandeses teve por intuito contrabandear espécies de fauna e da flora, além de pedras e metais preciosos. Esses povos colaboraram intensamente pela devastação do meio ambiente brasileiro nas fases do ciclo do pau-brasil, dos metais preciosos, da canade- açúcar e do gado. E o Direito brasileiro não poderia ficar alheio a esses dilemas socioculturais com tendência de infinita e crescente transformação ao País. O maior avanço coercitivo foi o advento da Lei n. 9.605, de 1998, à defesa e à proteção do meio ambiente, por meio da criação de novos crimes, instituindo-se, assim, um sistema de proteção penal-administrativo eficaz; porém, um dos maiores obstáculos que vem sendo enfrentado pela Polícia Federal brasileira, considerada uma das melhores corporações do mundo, e o Ministério Público é a fragilidade do único tipo penal versado ao combate ao tráfico dos animais.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Portable system of energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence was used to determine the elemental composition of 68 pottery fragments from Sambaqui do Bacanga, an archeological site in Sao Luis, Maranhao, Brazil. This site was occupied from 6600 BP until 900 BP. By determining the element chemical composition of those fragments, it was possible to verify the existence of engobe in 43 pottery fragments. Obtained from two-dimensional graphs and hierarchical cluster analysis performed in fragments of stratigraphies from surface and 113-cm level, and 10 to 20, 132 and 144-cm level, it was possible to group these fragments in five distinct groups, according to their stratigraphies. The results of data grouping (two-dimensional graphics) are in agreement with hierarchical cluster analysis by Ward method. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The effects of spatial competition among colonial marine organisms are often evident in the contact zones between colonies. These effects are especially pronounced when the interaction results in overgrowth or necrosis of one of the competitors. Ascidians, one of the dominant taxonomic groups in subtidal sessile communities, have specialized morula cells that provide a defense against microbial infections. Injuries resulting from interspecific competitive interactions might also act as a stimulus for this defensive mechanism. Therefore, we expected to see the recruitment of morula cells in tissues near competitor contact zones. To test the hypothesis that spatial competition elicits this immune response, we placed colonies of the ascidian Didemnum perlucidum from southeastern Brazil in four different types of competitive situations: (1) overgrowth of the competitor, (2) stand-off interactions, (3) overgrowth by the competitor, and (4) free of competitors. Our results indicate that competitive interactions increase the population of morula cells in contact zones, as more cells were observed in interactions that resulted in the overgrowth of individuals of D. perlucidum, and fewer cells were observed in colonies that were free of competitors. We identified the defensive function of the morula cells by showing the presence of the enzyme phenoloxidase within its vacuoles. Phenoloxidase is a widespread enzyme among animals and plants, and is frequently used in defense by synthesizing toxic quinones from polyphenol substrates. This is the first study to document the presence of morula cells in didemnid ascidians and the mobilization of these cells by spatial competition by heterospecifics, and one of the first studies to identify phenoloxidase activity in morula cells.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The process of territorial formation in Brazil is examined in this paper in order to establish, through a study that favors more interior region of Portuguese America, a suitable analytical arsenal geohistorica an interpretation of the built legacy of colonial Lusitanian action on American soil. Thus, it is expected to recover some aspects not yet addressed conclusively by the specialized literature, the importance of colonial territorial nexus in the construction and maintenance of the substrate material on which the new politically independent state would claim jurisdiction after 1822. Through the examination of so-called western border, articulated through the contacts held between the cities network of Goias and the strong, prisons, villages and towns planned in Mato Grosso, outline an interpretation of regional dynamics in the moments preceding the running of the Brazilian political emancipation.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Early diagenetic chert, infrequently exploited in Phanerozoic micropaleontology, was examined for organic-walled microfossils in petrographic thin sections of silicified dolostones from diverse levels and localities of the Assistencia Formation (Permian, Parana Basin) in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil. In contrast to previous palynological studies of this formation, the use of thin sections allowed direct observation in three dimensions of common palynomorphs, as well as benthic microbial mats preserved in situ in various stages of their life cycles and degradation. As in palynological residues from the more wellknown shale of this formation, the chert contains wind-dispersed pollen grains and phytoclasts derived from terrestrial sources and planktonic cryptarchs (unornamented coccoidal unicellular or colonial palynomorphs). However, only in the chert is it possible to see much more delicate microfossils, such as abundant cyanobacteria of the in situ benthic microbiota as well as chlorophycean microalgae of the microphytoplankton. Post-depositional processes affecting the formation have destroyed all but the most resistant organic remains in the other lithologies, such that only rare, degraded pollen grains are seen in the unsilicified dolostone of the formation, and in the shale the vast majority of microfossils have been compacted to flattened disks. On the other hand, early silicification not only preserved organic remains at an incipient stage of decomposition but also impeded significant further degradation due to compaction, recrystallization, and oxidation. Thus, the petrographic study of such chert can complement traditional palynological investigations in Phanerozoic rocks by furnishing hitherto unavailable information, especially with regard to benthic organic microfossils and fragile organic-walled phytoplankton normally absent from organic residues. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.