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Brazil |
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Landforms
created by glacial erosion
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The Amazon
•Rises
in Peru.
•Flows
through Brazil to the Atlantic Ocean.
•It’s
the world’s second longest river (6.580 km.)
•Drains
over a third of Brazil, including the rainforest.
•Has
hundreds of tributaries.
•Is
over 80 km. wide at it’s mouth.
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Brazilian Highlands |
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•Mix
of ancient hills, plateaux (high flat areas) and mountains.
•Rise
sharply from the coast, forming a steep slope called the Great
Escarpment.
•There’s
just a narrow strip of land between the escarpment and the
Atlantic Ocean.
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Brazil’s Climate
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Equatorial Humid |
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Hot all year.
Temperature does not
vary much.
Very wet.
Most rain falling in
the first half of the year. |
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Litoral Humid |
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Quite hot all year.
Temperature does not
vary much.
Very wet in the first
half of the year.
Most rain falling
December to March. |
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Tropical Semi-Dry |
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Hot with very dry
season.
Hot all year, gets a
bit hotter in the dry season.
Not much rain in the
wet season.
Sometimes there is
drought. |
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Tropical |
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Hot and wet with dry
season.
Quite hot all year.
Most rain falls in
December to March when the sun is more directly overhead. |
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Subtropical Humid |
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Milder and Wet
Has different seasons.
Some rain all the
year round.
May even snow in
winter. |
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Brazil’s Natural Resources |
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Fuels |
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•Has
some oil and gas, but not enough for its needs.
•Grows
sugar cane to make ethanol which is used as a fuel for cars and
power stations.
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Minerals |
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•One
of the top producers of iron, aluminium, tin and other metals.
•Top
producer of diamonds and other precious stones.
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Soil and Climate |
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•Has
a wide range of soils and climates.
•It
can grow a wide range of crops: sugar cane, coffee, soya beans,
rice, bananas, oranges, cotton …
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Water |
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•Lots
of rivers, no water problems.
•Have
many hydroelectricity power stations.
•Brazil
gets 90% of its electricity from hydro.
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Favelas |
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•A
favela is a collection of shacks built on waste ground without
permission.
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The poorest people in the city live here.
•All
Brazilian cities have favelas.
•20%
of Rio’s population live in favelas.
•Government
is trying to improve them suplying water and other services but
progress is
slow.
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Life in the Favelas |
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•Built
from anything (bricks, old sheets of metal, wood, plastic)
•Most
have no running water or electricity.
•Many
are hooked up illegally to cables and water mains.
•Rain
turns paths into muddy sewers.
•People
get work in the cities in factories, as servants …
•Not
many favela children finish school.
•Lots
of disease, because of germs.
•Lots
of crime, violence and drug use.
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Gross Domestic Product (GDP) |
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•It
is the total value of the goods and services the country
produces in a year.
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Gross Domestic Product per Capita (GDP per Capita) |
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•It
is the GDP divided by the population. In other words it tells
you how well off people are on average.
•The
higher the GDP per capita the more developed a country is.
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Indicators |
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Life Expectancy
•How
long a person in a country is expected to live.
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Infant Mortality
•How
many babies per thousand born alive who die before they reach 1.
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Adult Literacy Rate
•Percentage
of people aged 15 and over who can read and write a simple
sentence.
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Undernourished People
•Percentage
of the population who don’t get enough to eat, and live in
hunger.
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Regions of Brazil |
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It
is divided into five main regions, and the regions are divided into
states. |
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Large scale development in the Amazon |
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Large scale
development projects started in the Amazon after most of the area
became part of Brazil’s territory in 1967. The Brazilian
Government’s Polamazonia Plan in the 1970s aimed to open up the
Amazon to development. This included encouraging and funding the
following large scale development projects: |
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Mining |
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Miners (garimpeiros)
have caused damage to the ecosystem by cutting down large areas of
forest and by using chemicals to purify their metals. They use
enormous amounts of mercury to purify the gold and this toxic metal
is released into the rivers. |
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Slash and burn |
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Slash and burn is
used to clear the land for settlement and ranching. |
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Logging |
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Road building |
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Tucurui Dam |
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Tucurui Dam was
built between 1976 and 1984, on the Lower Tocantins River in the
state of Para, approximately 300km south of Belem. The reservoir
created upstream of the dam is over 2000km2.
The dam will produce more than 4000 MW of electricity. |
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Hydroelectric Power |
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‘HEP is a
renewable form of energy. This means that unlike coal, oil and gas,
this type of energy does not run out. Brazil gets 92.5% of its
energy from HEP and the demand for energy is rising. Hydroelec plans
to build more dams like Tucurui in the Amazon to harness the fast
flowing rivers in this area. Hydroelec believes that this
electricity will not only benefit industries all over Brazil but
will also provide energy to satisfy the country’s growing population.’ |
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