UNESP 2007 Inglês - Questões
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Common questions
What is The Rainforest Site?
The Rainforest Site is an online activism site that offers simple ways to help in the fight against the destruction of our rainforests.
Clicking is Free
In just a few seconds each day, visitors can click on the green “Preserve Endangered Land” button on the home page and, at no cost to them, help preserve rainforest land worldwide. Preservation of habitat is paid for by The Rainforest Site’s sponsors and accomplished by The Nature Conservancy, The Rainforest Conservation Fund, The World Parks Endowment, and The Friends of Calakmul. These organizations work to preserve rainforest land in Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Paraguay and other locations worldwide.
100% of sponsor advertising fees goes to our charitable partners.
The Rainforest Site was founded in May of 2000. To date, more than 153 million visitors have clicked to save more than 40,500 acres of habitat (that’s more than 1,767 million square feet of land!) via a simple and free daily click.
1) How does the site work?
2) Who pays for protecting rainforests?
3) How do you calculate the amount of rainforest protected by visitors’ clicks?
4) How often can I click on the "Preserve Endangered Land” button? Can I just keep clicking and save thousands of square feet of rainforest at once?
5) How much rainforest habitat has been saved? Where is this land located?
6) Is The Rainforest Site a nonprofit organization?
7) What is The Rainforest Site’s privacy policy?
8) How can I help The Rainforest Site find sponsors?
(www.therainforestsite.com)
De acordo com o texto, o site em questão
Common questions
What is The Rainforest Site?
The Rainforest Site is an online activism site that offers simple ways to help in the fight against the destruction of our rainforests.
Clicking is Free
In just a few seconds each day, visitors can click on the green “Preserve Endangered Land” button on the home page and, at no cost to them, help preserve rainforest land worldwide. Preservation of habitat is paid for by The Rainforest Site’s sponsors and accomplished by The Nature Conservancy, The Rainforest Conservation Fund, The World Parks Endowment, and The Friends of Calakmul. These organizations work to preserve rainforest land in Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Paraguay and other locations worldwide.
100% of sponsor advertising fees goes to our charitable partners.
The Rainforest Site was founded in May of 2000. To date, more than 153 million visitors have clicked to save more than 40,500 acres of habitat (that’s more than 1,767 million square feet of land!) via a simple and free daily click.
1) How does the site work?
2) Who pays for protecting rainforests?
3) How do you calculate the amount of rainforest protected by visitors’ clicks?
4) How often can I click on the "Preserve Endangered Land” button? Can I just keep clicking and save thousands of square feet of rainforest at once?
5) How much rainforest habitat has been saved? Where is this land located?
6) Is The Rainforest Site a nonprofit organization?
7) What is The Rainforest Site’s privacy policy?
8) How can I help The Rainforest Site find sponsors?
(www.therainforestsite.com)
De acordo com o texto,
Common questions
What is The Rainforest Site?
The Rainforest Site is an online activism site that offers simple ways to help in the fight against the destruction of our rainforests.
Clicking is Free
In just a few seconds each day, visitors can click on the green “Preserve Endangered Land” button on the home page and, at no cost to them, help preserve rainforest land worldwide. Preservation of habitat is paid for by The Rainforest Site’s sponsors and accomplished by The Nature Conservancy, The Rainforest Conservation Fund, The World Parks Endowment, and The Friends of Calakmul. These organizations work to preserve rainforest land in Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Paraguay and other locations worldwide.
100% of sponsor advertising fees goes to our charitable partners.
The Rainforest Site was founded in May of 2000. To date, more than 153 million visitors have clicked to save more than 40,500 acres of habitat (that’s more than 1,767 million square feet of land!) via a simple and free daily click.
1) How does the site work?
2) Who pays for protecting rainforests?
3) How do you calculate the amount of rainforest protected by visitors’ clicks?
4) How often can I click on the "Preserve Endangered Land” button? Can I just keep clicking and save thousands of square feet of rainforest at once?
5) How much rainforest habitat has been saved? Where is this land located?
6) Is The Rainforest Site a nonprofit organization?
7) What is The Rainforest Site’s privacy policy?
8) How can I help The Rainforest Site find sponsors?
(www.therainforestsite.com)
No final do texto, oito perguntas são apresentadas. A resposta "The Rainforest Site is not a nonprofit organization and cannot accept financial donations directly” responde à pergunta de número
Common questions
What is The Rainforest Site?
The Rainforest Site is an online activism site that offers simple ways to help in the fight against the destruction of our rainforests.
Clicking is Free
In just a few seconds each day, visitors can click on the green “Preserve Endangered Land” button on the home page and, at no cost to them, help preserve rainforest land worldwide. Preservation of habitat is paid for by The Rainforest Site’s sponsors and accomplished by The Nature Conservancy, The Rainforest Conservation Fund, The World Parks Endowment, and The Friends of Calakmul. These organizations work to preserve rainforest land in Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Paraguay and other locations worldwide.
100% of sponsor advertising fees goes to our charitable partners.
The Rainforest Site was founded in May of 2000. To date, more than 153 million visitors have clicked to save more than 40,500 acres of habitat (that’s more than 1,767 million square feet of land!) via a simple and free daily click.
1) How does the site work?
2) Who pays for protecting rainforests?
3) How do you calculate the amount of rainforest protected by visitors’ clicks?
4) How often can I click on the "Preserve Endangered Land” button? Can I just keep clicking and save thousands of square feet of rainforest at once?
5) How much rainforest habitat has been saved? Where is this land located?
6) Is The Rainforest Site a nonprofit organization?
7) What is The Rainforest Site’s privacy policy?
8) How can I help The Rainforest Site find sponsors?
(www.therainforestsite.com)
A resposta "You can click once a day, every day of the year on The Rainforest Site. Our agreement with our sponsors allows us to count one click, per person, per calendar day” está relacionada à pergunta de número
Global warming: Get used to it
By Fareed Zakaria
The most inconvenient truth about global warming is that we cannot stop it. Please don’t mistake me a skeptic. I’m fully persuaded by the evidence that climate change is real and serious. Of the 12 hottest years on record, 11 occurred since 1995. Temperatures have risen by 0.74 degrees Celsius over the past century. (If that seems small, keep in mind that the difference in temperature between the ice age and now is about 5 degrees C.) And human activity appears to be one important cause. The concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has risen dramatically since the industrial revolution. Methane has doubled and carbon dioxide levels are up 30 percent since 1750. The projections going forward are highly plausible scientific estimations. The recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts that by 2100, temperatures will have risen by somewhere between 1.1 and 6.4 degrees, and as a result, sea levels will rise by 18 to 59 centimeters. The trouble is, if you accept all these facts and theories about global warming, it is difficult to see how any human response launched today can avert it. (...)
(Newsweek, Feb 17, 2007.)
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