Posts under "Brazilian News"

We’ve written about flooding in Brazil before, like the Santa Catarina floods in 2008 and the coastal flooding in Rio de Janeiro last year. There’s often seasonal flooding, particularly in the south, but this year has been exceptionally bad. Heavy rains [chuvas] and floods [enchentes] have affected Minas Gerais, São Paulo, and Santa Catarina, but the worst hit area has been Rio de Janeiro’s mountain region [Região Serrana], where over 700 people have died and thousands were left temporarily homeless.

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From Estadão:

“Segundo a chefe da seção de Previsão do Tempo, Marlene Leal, por causa da intensidade do temporal e a geografia da área, a ‘catástrofe era inevitável’. ‘Na proporção e na intensidade com que as chuvas caíram não havia como evitar que uma tragédia acontecesse. Eu confesso que a proporção atingida – em uma área tão extensa, região montanhosa, de vale, aliada àquelas cabeças d’água que se formaram descendo em velocidade montanha abaixo em uma área imensa – me surpreendeu.’”

Why was the meteorologist surprised?

Want to help Brazil flood victims? If you’re in the US, click here. If you’re in the UK, click here. And if you’re in Brazil, click here.

This week, an interesting story came out in the news about Brazilian scientists working in the United States on an autism study. They discovered an autism “neuron” that they managed to fix in a laboratory experiment. The ground-breaking study, led by Brazilian molecular biologist Alysson Muotri, showed that there may be a possibility to treat or even cure autism. The scientists took skin samples from children with autism and children without autism, and found that the neurons from the children with autism had shorter synapses. They tested a drug to treat the effected neurons, and miraculously, the neurons were fixed. The big challenge now is to find a new treatment that would work outside of a lab.

Learn more below!

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Cientistas brasileiros consertam ‘neurônio autista’ em laboratório, Portal de Paulinia

“Para analisar diferenças entre os neurônios, a equipe fez uma biópsia de pele de pacientes autistas e de pessoas sem a condição. Depois, reprogramou as células da pele em células de pluripotência induzida (iPS) – idênticas às células-tronco embrionárias, mas não extraídas de embriões. “Pluripotência” é a capacidade de toda célula-tronco de se especializar, ou diferenciar, em qualquer célula do corpo.” READ MORE

Vocabulary Check

1. What’s the Portuguese word for disease?

2. What does incurável mean in English?

3. How do you say stem cells in Portuguese?

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The FUNAI, or the Fundação Nacional do Índio, is the Brazilian governmental organization in charge of protecting and advocating for Brazil’s indigenous populations. Created in 1967, the agency not only helps provide education and basic services to tribes, but also promotes the study and understanding of tribal populations and indigenous culture. Also, one of the agency’s most important functions is to help maintain and defend indigenous reservations.

Recently, FUNAI published a study showing that there are over seventy indigenous groups with little to no contact with the outside world, the large majority of them in the Amazon.

Read the article about FUNAI and check out the map from the study. Then, take a look at this video interview of Mercio Gomes, one of the leading experts on Brazilian indigenous groups  who also used to be the head of FUNAI. He’s a trained sociologist and continues to advocate for indigenous rights.

Brasil tem mais de 70 grupos indígenas isolados, aponta FunaiGlobo Amazonia

Excerpt: “O Brasil tem 76 grupos indígenas vivendo em situação de isolamento ou contatados pela primeira vez recentemente. Ao menos 28 tribos isoladas já foram confirmadas pela Fundação Nacional do Índio (Funai), mas o órgão ainda estuda mais de 40 pontos em que há possibilidade de encontrar povos isolados.”

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Social networks are huge in Brazil, and the country has become one of the fastest growing markets for some of the world’s most popular social websites. Today we’re going to learn a bit more about trends in social networks in Brazil with two short pieces from the Brazilian news. 

Facebook cresce mais de 400% em um ano no Brasil, iG Tecnologia

Excerpt: “Segundo dados da comScore, o Facebook cresceu 479% entre agosto de 2009 e 2010. Atualmente, essa rede recebe cerca de nove milhões de usuários por mês.”

Read the full story here

Audiência do Orkut ainda é o triplo da do Facebook no país, diz estudo, IDG Now

Excerpt: “De acordo com a pesquisa, a rede do Google teve, em agosto, 29,4 milhões de visitantes únicos (internautas acima de 15 anos), contra cerca de 9 milhões de seu principal “concorrente”, que ainda está em 3º lugar, atrás do Windows Live Profile (12,5 milhões).”

Read the full story here

Questions

1. What does the study say about Facebook and Orkut use in Brazil?

2. Out of total time spent on the Internet, what percentage of time do Brazilians spend on social networks?

3. How many Orkut users are there in Brazil?

4. What percentage of Brazilian internet users accessed Twitter in August 2010?

Answers after the jump.

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I know you guys have probably had enough of us talking about the elections in Brazil, so I’ll be brief and won’t make you read too much.

The image below taken from Folha.com shows the presidential race results, the apuração dos votos.  With no candidate having a majority vote, the top two, Dilma Roussef and José Serra will take each other on for a second round of elections on October 31st (click on the image for better viewing).

Although this was somewhat already expected, the real buzz generated has been on the number of votes Marina Silva was able to rack up considering back in March all sorts of studies showed only 7% of the population was planning on voting for her while Dilma and José Serra’s percentages stayed pretty much true to the actual results.

I was unable to “steal” videos on most news websites with thank you speeches from the candidates, but here goes a link to a great little thank you speech by Marina Silva last night: Estamos em primeiro lugar de uma nova política.

If you get a chance to watch the video (it’s 2 minutes long), why does Marina Silva consider herself a winner after not making it on to the second round of elections?

She has announced she will remain neutral for the second round, so this should be another interesting month of debate!

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