152 resultados para Okinawa


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Pós-graduação em Ciências Sociais - FFC

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Horticultura) - FCA

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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We can know a people through their cultural and artistic assets. One of the many aspects of Japanese culture is origami, a fusion of the verb “oru”, which means folding, with the word “kami” meaning paper. In this communication, we describe the course “Origami and Kirigami: art and culture as a recreational and educational resource”. The course aimed to present these two oriental techniques based on paper and its potential as a source of entertainment and education, at the same time seeking to introduce cultural aspects of these arts of folding and/or cutting paper. This practice is more common than we realize, and is present in our day-to-day life when we perform actions such as folding clothes and papers, and making packages, amongst others. However, few are aware of the benefits that this folding brings to the fields of Arts, Mathematics, and Science, besides its recreational characteristics. Kirigami is a mixed technique that in addition to using folds in the paper (as in origami) also uses cuts (“kiru” – meaning, “cut”). It can be performed with heavier paper than origami, and by introducing some cuts, the paper can be folded to form the desired shape. It is a simple technique, with impressive results. We conducted eight weekly meetings, each lasting four hours, totaling 32 hours of coursework. In addition to the classes, a visit was made to the Okinawa Club in Bauru (São Paulo), where it was possible for the students of the course and the elderly group (fujinkai) of origamists of the club to exchange experiences. Finally, an exhibition was organized to display the artifacts produced by the course participants and disseminate the work of the students.

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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA

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O Karatê-Do é uma das artes marciais mais conhecidas e praticadas em todo o mundo. Esta arte marcial, nascida na ilha de Okinawa, no Japão, passou por profundas transformações ao longo do tempo até alcançar a configuração que tem hoje em dia, assim como toda a sociedade japonesa. Mais do que uma simples forma de luta, o Karate-Do se tornou um caminho, uma doutrina a ser seguida por seus praticantes, ensinando valores e conceitos para a construção da personalidade de indivíduo da sociedade. Através da esportivização desta arte, assim como ocorreu com o Judô e outras formas de combate, e também através da crescente popularização e exposição das artes marciais no cenário mundial pelos chamados eventos de artes marciais (MMA), os valores e atributos intrínsecos ao Karatê e a outras artes marciais não têm sido transmitidos aos alunos. Os treinos visam apenas golpes e ataques utilizados em competições, supervalorizando a técnica em detrimento as filosofias que são a base do Karatê. O objetivo deste estudo é analisar enquanto prática formadora em seu contexto histórico e cultural o Karatê-Do. Neste sentido, procuraremos explorar as características singulares desta modalidade de arte marcial que contribuem para a formação ética e moral de seus praticantes

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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The wildlife in Japan does more damage in outbreaks in forestry than in agriculture. Hares annually damage in excess of 250 thousand acres. Voles annually damage 50 to 100 thousand acres; in some areas great damage may occur suddenly. The giant flying squirrel damages areas of replanted trees in southern areas of Japan. The Himalayan black bear strips the bark on tree trunks. In agriculture, the sparrow and the duck do an excessive amount of damage in rice fields, and the boar does conspicuous harm in the plowed fields of mountain villages. In Okinawa, sugar cane is attacked by Rattus rattus, and in some years the loss is severe. Of even greater concern is the damage done by introduced vertebrates. The gem-faced civet was imported from Taiwan. Similarly introduced from Taiwan, the tree squirrel increased on Izu-Oshima. The nutria was introduced in 1940; they escaped from cages in Southern Honshu and have increased.

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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Spontaneous crossing over in males of Drosophila ananassae has been well demonstrated using F-1 individuals from crosses between marker stocks and wild type strains. However, the question of its occurrence in males from natural populations remained open. Here we present the cytological evidence that crossing over does occur in males of D. ananassae from two Brazilian populations, sampled nearly 21 years apart, and in two recently sampled populations, one from Indonesia and one from Okinawa, Japan. Cytological analysis of meiosis in males collected from nature and in sons of females from the same population inseminated in nature revealed the presence of chiasmata, inversion chiasmata, and isosite chromosome breakages in the diplotene cells in all sampled populations. These data demonstrate that reciprocal and nonreciprocal exchanges and chromosome breakages, previously reported as related events of male crossing over, do occur at variable frequencies among males from natural populations.