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Q599902 Inglês
TEXT 2

Innovation is the new key to survival

[…]

At its most basic, innovation presents an optimal strategy for controlling costs. Companies that have invested in such technologies as remote mining, autonomous equipment and driverless trucks and trains have reduced expenses by orders of magnitude, while simultaneously driving up productivity.

Yet, gazing towards the horizon, it is rapidly becoming clear that innovation can do much more than reduce capital intensity. Approached strategically, it also has the power to reduce people and energy intensity, while increasing mining intensity.

Capturing the learnings 

The key is to think of innovation as much more than research and development (R&D) around particular processes or technologies. Companies can, in fact, innovate in multiple ways, such as leveraging supplier knowledge around specific operational challenges, redefining their participation in the energy value chain or finding new ways to engage and partner with major stakeholders and constituencies.

To reap these rewards, however, mining companies must overcome their traditionally conservative tendencies. In many cases, miners struggle to adopt technologies proven to work at other mining companies, let alone those from other industries. As a result, innovation becomes less of a technology problem and more of an adoption problem.

By breaking this mindset, mining companies can free themselves to adapt practical applications that already exist in other industries and apply them to fit their current needs. For instance, the tunnel boring machines used by civil engineers to excavate the Chunnel can vastly reduce miners' reliance on explosives. Until recently, those machines were too large to apply in a mining setting. Some innovators, however, are now incorporating the underlying technology to build smaller machines—effectively adapting mature solutions from other industries to realize more rapid results. 

Re-imagining the future

At the same time, innovation mandates companies to think in entirely new ways. Traditionally, for instance, miners have focused on extracting higher grades and achieving faster throughput by optimizing the pit, schedule, product mix and logistics. A truly innovative mindset, however, will see them adopt an entirely new design paradigm that leverages new information, mining and energy technologies to maximize value. […]

Approached in this way, innovation can drive more than cost reduction. It can help mining companies mitigate and manage risks, strengthen business models and foster more effective community and government relations. It can help mining services companies enhance their value to the industry by developing new products and services. Longer-term, it can even position organizations to move the needle on such endemic issues as corporate social responsibility, environmental performance and sustainability.

(http://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/ru/Document s/energy-resources/ru_er_tracking_the_trends_2015_eng.pdf)
When companies invest in “remote mining, autonomous equipment and driverless trucks and trains" (l. 3-4), it is clear that their goal is to:
Alternativas
Q599901 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
The phrase “As a result" (l. 16) can be replaced by:
Alternativas
Q599900 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
The sentence that best explains “Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income." (l. 18-19) is:
Alternativas
Q599899 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
The problem referred to in “solutions to this problem" (l. 14-15) is:
Alternativas
Q599898 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
The opposite of the underlined word in “are often hard to distinguish" (l. 11) is:
Alternativas
Q599897 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
Text 1 refers to “hiking trails" (l. 2), which are primarily intended for:
Alternativas
Q599896 Inglês
 TEXT 1

                        


Mining tourism in Ouro Preto

Ouro Preto is surrounded by a rich and varied natural environment with waterfalls, hiking trails and native vegetation partially protected as state parks. Parts of these resources are used for tourism. Paradoxically, this ecosystem contrasts with the human occupation of the region that produced, after centuries, a rich history and a cultural connection to mining, its oldest economic activity which triggered occupation. The region has an unlimited potential for tourism, especially in specific segments such as mining heritage tourism, in association or not with the existing ecotourism market. In fact, in Ouro Preto, tourism, history, geology and mining are often hard to distinguish; such is the inter-relationship between these segments.

For centuries, a major problem of mining has been the reuse of the affected areas. Modern mining projects proposed solutions to this problem right from the initial stages of operation, which did not happen until recently. As a result, most quarries and other old mining areas that do not have an appropriate destination represent serious environmental problems. Mining tourism utilizing exhausted mines is a source of employment and income. Tourism activities may even contribute to the recovery of degraded areas in various ways, such as reforestation for leisure purposes, or their transformation into history museums where aspects of local mining are interpreted.

Minas Gerais, and particularly Ouro Preto, provides the strong and rich cultural and historical content needed for the transformation of mining remnants into attractive tourism products, especially when combined with the existing cultural tourism of the region. Although mining tourism is explored in various parts of the world in extremely different social, economic, cultural and natural contexts, in Brazil it is still not a strategy readily adopted as an alternative for areas affected by mining activities.

(Lohmann, G. M.; Flecha, A. C.; Knupp, M. E. C. G.; Liccardo, A. (2011). Mining tourism in Ouro Preto, Brazil: opportunities and challenges. In: M. V. Conlin; L. Jolliffe (eds).Mining heritage and tourism: a global synthesis. New York: Routledge, pp. 194-202.)
Mark the statements below as TRUE (T) or FALSE (F) according to Text 1.

( ) Tourism may actually be quite beneficial to some degraded mining areas.

( ) Mining tourism has recently been promptly embraced by Brazilian regions.

( ) Ouro Preto is attracting people because mining is one of its most recent activities.

The correct sequence is: 
Alternativas
Q599895 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
“A maior ameaça à democracia, à justiça socioeconômica e ao crescimento econômico neste país é que predomina a ideia de controle monopolista de algumas empresas sobre a economia". (Nelson Mandela)

Assinale o comentário adequado aos componentes da citação de Nelson Mandela sobre democracia:
Alternativas
Q599894 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
O segmento, retirado dos pensamentos anteriores, que mostra o vocábulo QUE com a classe de pronome relativo, ou seja, em substituição a um termo anterior, corretamente indicado, é:
Alternativas
Q599893 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
Entre as citações abaixo, todas de escritores célebres, aquela que mostra uma contradição interna da democracia é:
Alternativas
Q599892 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
O jornalista autor do texto 2 informa que os resultados da pesquisa foram muito chocantes, isso porque:
Alternativas
Q599891 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
“Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil".

O termo “desde 2008" causa modificação de sentido quando colocado na posição seguinte:
Alternativas
Q599890 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
Os termos “satisfeitos" e “muito satisfeitos" aparecem entre aspas porque:
Alternativas
Q599889 Português
Texto 2

Democracia refém (José Roberto de Toledo)

Desde 2008, o ibope pergunta à população em idade de votar quão satisfeita ela está com o funcionamento da democracia no Brasil. Os resultados nunca foram brilhantes ainda menos se comparados com países latino-americanos como Uruguai e Argentina, mas jamais haviam sido tão chocantes quanto agora. Só 15% dos brasileiros se dizem “satisfeitos" (14%) ou “muito satisfeitos" (1%) com o jeito que o regime democrático funciona no país. (Estado de São Paulo, 04/09/2015)
Há uma série de vocábulos denominados “modalizadores", que se caracterizam por inserir opiniões do enunciador sobre o assunto tratado. O segmento abaixo, retirado do texto 2, cujo vocábulo sublinhado é exemplo de modalizador é:
Alternativas
Q599888 Português
Texto 1

Do grego demo=povo e cracia=governo, ou seja, governo do povo. Democracia é um sistema em que as pessoas de um país podem participar da vida política. Essa participação pode ocorrer através de eleições, plebiscitos e referendos. Dentro de uma democracia, as pessoas possuem liberdade de expressão e manifestações de suas opiniões. A maior parte das nações do mundo atual seguem o sistema democrático.

Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX. Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes. Já no século XX, a democracia passou a ser predominante no mundo. (suapesquisa.com)
Sobre o emprego de conectivos no texto 1, é correto afirmar que:
Alternativas
Q599887 Português
Texto 1

Do grego demo=povo e cracia=governo, ou seja, governo do povo. Democracia é um sistema em que as pessoas de um país podem participar da vida política. Essa participação pode ocorrer através de eleições, plebiscitos e referendos. Dentro de uma democracia, as pessoas possuem liberdade de expressão e manifestações de suas opiniões. A maior parte das nações do mundo atual seguem o sistema democrático.

Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX. Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes. Já no século XX, a democracia passou a ser predominante no mundo. (suapesquisa.com)
“Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes".

Sobre os componentes desse segmento do texto 1, é correto afirmar que: 
Alternativas
Q599886 Português
Texto 1

Do grego demo=povo e cracia=governo, ou seja, governo do povo. Democracia é um sistema em que as pessoas de um país podem participar da vida política. Essa participação pode ocorrer através de eleições, plebiscitos e referendos. Dentro de uma democracia, as pessoas possuem liberdade de expressão e manifestações de suas opiniões. A maior parte das nações do mundo atual seguem o sistema democrático.

Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX. Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes. Já no século XX, a democracia passou a ser predominante no mundo. (suapesquisa.com)
“Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX". O sentido adequado dessa frase do texto 1 é:
Alternativas
Q599885 Português
Texto 1

Do grego demo=povo e cracia=governo, ou seja, governo do povo. Democracia é um sistema em que as pessoas de um país podem participar da vida política. Essa participação pode ocorrer através de eleições, plebiscitos e referendos. Dentro de uma democracia, as pessoas possuem liberdade de expressão e manifestações de suas opiniões. A maior parte das nações do mundo atual seguem o sistema democrático.

Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX. Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes. Já no século XX, a democracia passou a ser predominante no mundo. (suapesquisa.com)
O primeiro parágrafo do texto 1 é composto por cinco períodos; o período que apresenta problemas em sua formulação escrita é:
Alternativas
Q599884 Português
Texto 1

Do grego demo=povo e cracia=governo, ou seja, governo do povo. Democracia é um sistema em que as pessoas de um país podem participar da vida política. Essa participação pode ocorrer através de eleições, plebiscitos e referendos. Dentro de uma democracia, as pessoas possuem liberdade de expressão e manifestações de suas opiniões. A maior parte das nações do mundo atual seguem o sistema democrático.

Embora tenha surgido na Grécia Antiga, a democracia foi pouco usada pelos países até o século XIX. Até este século, grande parte dos países do mundo usavam sistemas políticos que colocavam o poder de decisão nas mãos dos governantes. Já no século XX, a democracia passou a ser predominante no mundo. (suapesquisa.com)
O texto 1 começa apresentando a etimologia do vocábulo democracia; o item abaixo em que a significação do vocábulo dado está correta é:
Alternativas
Q599883 Português
                          
“Assaltar os cofres públicos é um ato democrático porque o dinheiro é poder e o poder emana do povo".

A frase mostra uma estrutura argumentativa, que teria validade, mas não verdade, na seguinte forma: 
Alternativas
Respostas
1761: A
1762: B
1763: A
1764: D
1765: A
1766: C
1767: E
1768: A
1769: B
1770: D
1771: D
1772: E
1773: C
1774: A
1775: E
1776: C
1777: B
1778: D
1779: E
1780: A