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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: UEA Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - UEA - 004. Prova de Conhecimentos Específicos - Exatas |
Q1801642 Matemática
Ao aumentar em 50% o raio da base do cilindro circular reto A, obtém-se o cilindro circular reto B. Sabe-se que ambos têm alturas iguais (h = 4 cm), conforme indicado na figura.
Imagem associada para resolução da questão
Sendo VA e VB os volumes dos cilindros A e B, respectivamente, e VA + VB = 52π cm3, a área da superfície lateral do cilindro B é igual a
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: UEA Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - UEA - 004. Prova de Conhecimentos Específicos - Exatas |
Q1801641 Matemática
Em um sistema de coordenadas cartesianas ortogonais estão representados uma circunferência de centro M, que passa pelo ponto O(0, 0), e um triângulo retângulo ABC, cujos vértices são determinados pelos pontos A(1, 1), B(1, 3) e C(3, 1), conforme figura.
0424664ae4cb72f4a6c2.png (274×205)
Imagem associada para resolução da questão Sendo M o ponto médio do segmento BC.png (29×24)a área da região destacada em azul na figura é igual aImagem associada para resolução da questão
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1799006 Física
A figura representa um circuito elétrico de lâmpadas utilizadas na decoração de árvores de natal.
Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Se na lâmpada 6 for instalado um dispositivo de pisca-pisca, quando ela se apagar, certamente se apagarão as lâmpadas
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1799004 Física
A experiência realizada com o tubo de Crookes foi importante para a descoberta do elétron. Quando duas placas metálicas eletrizadas foram acopladas, uma positivamente e outra negativamente, desviaram os raios luminosos emitidos por qualquer gás colocado no interior do tubo, atraído pela placa positiva e repelido pela negativa.
A figura representa o tubo de Crookes, no qual há dois pares de placas, sendo um par disposto horizontalmente (P1, P2) e o outro par, disposto verticalmente (P3, P4).
Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Para que o raio luminoso emitido pelo gás ilumine a parte vermelha do tubo, as placas P1, P2, P3 e P4 devem estar eletrizadas, respectivamente, com cargas de sinais
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1799003 Física
A figura representa um tanque cheio de água sobre cuja superfície se propaga uma onda de amplitude A e comprimento de onda λ. Quando essa onda passa por um obstáculo de duas fendas (1 e 2) ocorrem dois fenômenos (F1 e F2).
Imagem associada para resolução da questão

A denominação dos fenômenos F1 e F2, a grandeza indicada em X e o valor da amplitude da onda em P são, respectivamente,
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1799001 Física
Três recipientes, A, B e C, de mesmo volume e hermeticamente fechados, contêm gases ideais. A massa total do gás e a velocidade média das moléculas contidas em cada um dos recipientes estão indicadas na tabela.
Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Sabendo-se que a temperatura de um gás ideal é diretamente proporcional à energia cinética média de suas moléculas, a relação entre as temperaturas TA, TB e TC é
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798999 Física
A figura ilustra a experiência de Torricelli, realizada para medir a pressão atmosférica, utilizando um tubo cheio de mercúrio e comparando a pressão nos pontos B e C.

Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Considere que o tubo da experiência esteja preenchido por um líquido de densidade desconhecida, que a altura h seja 50 cm, que a aceleração da gravidade seja 10m/s2 e que a pressão atmosférica local seja 1 × 105 Pa. A densidade desse líquido dentro do tubo é de
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798998 Física
Do alto de uma escada (ponto A) um bloco, de dimensão desprezível e massa igual a 1 kg, foi solto sobre um aparelho de ginástica conhecido como jump (uma pequena cama elástica). Esse aparelho, apoiado na altura da linha de referência, pode ser considerado uma mola ideal de constante elástica igual a 7600 N/m. Quando ele não está deformado, possui altura igual a 30 cm.
Imagem associada para resolução da questão


Considere que a deformação causada pelo bloco ao cair sobre o jump foi de 10 cm e que a aceleração da gravidade local seja 10 m/s². Nessas condições, a altura H, em relação à linha de referência, é de
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798997 Física
Um carro de competição percorre metade de um circuito com velocidade média de 200 km/h. Na segunda metade do circuito, o desempenho do carro melhora e sua velocidade média passa a ser 300 km/h. A velocidade média desse carro quando ele completa todo o circuito é de
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798996 Inglês
Leia o texto para responder à questão. 

The challenge of doctor-patient relations in the internet age



     “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you,” my patient said. My patient, a 19-year-old student, had already taken time off from school because of her anxiety. I was her psychiatrist, with over two decades of experience treating university students, and had just explained my diagnostic impressions based on a lengthy evaluation. I’d recommended that she try a medicine I expected would help. I’d also laid out the risks and benefits of other treatment options. 
      “Do you have additional questions I can answer?” I asked. I wanted to let her know that’s why I was there, to cull the research, to help make sense of it. “No, I like to go online and look for myself,” she said.
     More and more, I see students turning away from the expertise that a live person can offer and instead turning to the vast and somehow more objective-seeming “expertise” of the digital world.
     In an age when journalism we don’t like can be dismissed as “fake news,” suggesting that the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source, it’s not hard to understand why young people do this. The medical profession itself, under managed care, has played a role as well, providing less time for doctor-patient interactions and undermining the chances that a personal relationship and trust can develop. Under the guise of efficiency, medical test results are now often released directly to patients, sometimes before or even without the benefit of any interpretation.
     But there’s danger in trusting data over people, as there is in thinking the expertise of all people is equivalent. When it comes to health, digital natives may not be learning how to navigate effectively. And the consequences could be harmful.
    The availability of health data on the internet has its benefits. Online, for example, we can find explanations and solutions for symptoms we might be too embarrassed, or afraid, to discuss with another person, in person. Or, for lifethreatening diseases, we can locate clinical trials our doctors may not be aware of.
     However, there’s also a lot of misleading information, and information that’s simply untrue. The internet is full of people selling things – supplements, treatment regimens that have not been rigorously tested, even prescription medications – and making false promises that have not been scrutinized by regulatory agencies. Sometimes, as in the case of some websites that promote “an anorexic diet” for “aggressive” weight loss, the information can encourage life-threatening behavior.
      Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy. Who but the patient could best decide what was right for him or her? But years of clinical – and personal – experience have taught me that information in and of itself is insufficient. Judgment is also indispensable, especially in complex situations, and the capacity for good judgment rests within people, not data sets.

(Doris Iarovici is a psychiatrist at Harvard University’s Counseling and
Mental Health Services and the author of Mental Health Issues and the
University Student. www.nytimes.com, 01.03.2018. Adaptado.)
Assinale a alternativa cujo trecho evidencia a posição atual da autora sobre o desafio apresentado no título.
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798994 Inglês
Leia o texto para responder à questão. 

The challenge of doctor-patient relations in the internet age



     “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you,” my patient said. My patient, a 19-year-old student, had already taken time off from school because of her anxiety. I was her psychiatrist, with over two decades of experience treating university students, and had just explained my diagnostic impressions based on a lengthy evaluation. I’d recommended that she try a medicine I expected would help. I’d also laid out the risks and benefits of other treatment options. 
      “Do you have additional questions I can answer?” I asked. I wanted to let her know that’s why I was there, to cull the research, to help make sense of it. “No, I like to go online and look for myself,” she said.
     More and more, I see students turning away from the expertise that a live person can offer and instead turning to the vast and somehow more objective-seeming “expertise” of the digital world.
     In an age when journalism we don’t like can be dismissed as “fake news,” suggesting that the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source, it’s not hard to understand why young people do this. The medical profession itself, under managed care, has played a role as well, providing less time for doctor-patient interactions and undermining the chances that a personal relationship and trust can develop. Under the guise of efficiency, medical test results are now often released directly to patients, sometimes before or even without the benefit of any interpretation.
     But there’s danger in trusting data over people, as there is in thinking the expertise of all people is equivalent. When it comes to health, digital natives may not be learning how to navigate effectively. And the consequences could be harmful.
    The availability of health data on the internet has its benefits. Online, for example, we can find explanations and solutions for symptoms we might be too embarrassed, or afraid, to discuss with another person, in person. Or, for lifethreatening diseases, we can locate clinical trials our doctors may not be aware of.
     However, there’s also a lot of misleading information, and information that’s simply untrue. The internet is full of people selling things – supplements, treatment regimens that have not been rigorously tested, even prescription medications – and making false promises that have not been scrutinized by regulatory agencies. Sometimes, as in the case of some websites that promote “an anorexic diet” for “aggressive” weight loss, the information can encourage life-threatening behavior.
      Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy. Who but the patient could best decide what was right for him or her? But years of clinical – and personal – experience have taught me that information in and of itself is insufficient. Judgment is also indispensable, especially in complex situations, and the capacity for good judgment rests within people, not data sets.

(Doris Iarovici is a psychiatrist at Harvard University’s Counseling and
Mental Health Services and the author of Mental Health Issues and the
University Student. www.nytimes.com, 01.03.2018. Adaptado.)
De acordo com o quinto e o sexto parágrafos, um dos benefícios dos dados médicos disponíveis na internet é
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798992 Inglês
Leia o texto para responder à questão. 

The challenge of doctor-patient relations in the internet age



     “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you,” my patient said. My patient, a 19-year-old student, had already taken time off from school because of her anxiety. I was her psychiatrist, with over two decades of experience treating university students, and had just explained my diagnostic impressions based on a lengthy evaluation. I’d recommended that she try a medicine I expected would help. I’d also laid out the risks and benefits of other treatment options. 
      “Do you have additional questions I can answer?” I asked. I wanted to let her know that’s why I was there, to cull the research, to help make sense of it. “No, I like to go online and look for myself,” she said.
     More and more, I see students turning away from the expertise that a live person can offer and instead turning to the vast and somehow more objective-seeming “expertise” of the digital world.
     In an age when journalism we don’t like can be dismissed as “fake news,” suggesting that the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source, it’s not hard to understand why young people do this. The medical profession itself, under managed care, has played a role as well, providing less time for doctor-patient interactions and undermining the chances that a personal relationship and trust can develop. Under the guise of efficiency, medical test results are now often released directly to patients, sometimes before or even without the benefit of any interpretation.
     But there’s danger in trusting data over people, as there is in thinking the expertise of all people is equivalent. When it comes to health, digital natives may not be learning how to navigate effectively. And the consequences could be harmful.
    The availability of health data on the internet has its benefits. Online, for example, we can find explanations and solutions for symptoms we might be too embarrassed, or afraid, to discuss with another person, in person. Or, for lifethreatening diseases, we can locate clinical trials our doctors may not be aware of.
     However, there’s also a lot of misleading information, and information that’s simply untrue. The internet is full of people selling things – supplements, treatment regimens that have not been rigorously tested, even prescription medications – and making false promises that have not been scrutinized by regulatory agencies. Sometimes, as in the case of some websites that promote “an anorexic diet” for “aggressive” weight loss, the information can encourage life-threatening behavior.
      Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy. Who but the patient could best decide what was right for him or her? But years of clinical – and personal – experience have taught me that information in and of itself is insufficient. Judgment is also indispensable, especially in complex situations, and the capacity for good judgment rests within people, not data sets.

(Doris Iarovici is a psychiatrist at Harvard University’s Counseling and
Mental Health Services and the author of Mental Health Issues and the
University Student. www.nytimes.com, 01.03.2018. Adaptado.)
De acordo com o quarto parágrafo, a profissão médica contribui para que as pessoas recorram à internet em vez de recorrer a médicos. A justificativa apresentada é que
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798991 Inglês
Leia o texto para responder à questão. 

The challenge of doctor-patient relations in the internet age



     “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you,” my patient said. My patient, a 19-year-old student, had already taken time off from school because of her anxiety. I was her psychiatrist, with over two decades of experience treating university students, and had just explained my diagnostic impressions based on a lengthy evaluation. I’d recommended that she try a medicine I expected would help. I’d also laid out the risks and benefits of other treatment options. 
      “Do you have additional questions I can answer?” I asked. I wanted to let her know that’s why I was there, to cull the research, to help make sense of it. “No, I like to go online and look for myself,” she said.
     More and more, I see students turning away from the expertise that a live person can offer and instead turning to the vast and somehow more objective-seeming “expertise” of the digital world.
     In an age when journalism we don’t like can be dismissed as “fake news,” suggesting that the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source, it’s not hard to understand why young people do this. The medical profession itself, under managed care, has played a role as well, providing less time for doctor-patient interactions and undermining the chances that a personal relationship and trust can develop. Under the guise of efficiency, medical test results are now often released directly to patients, sometimes before or even without the benefit of any interpretation.
     But there’s danger in trusting data over people, as there is in thinking the expertise of all people is equivalent. When it comes to health, digital natives may not be learning how to navigate effectively. And the consequences could be harmful.
    The availability of health data on the internet has its benefits. Online, for example, we can find explanations and solutions for symptoms we might be too embarrassed, or afraid, to discuss with another person, in person. Or, for lifethreatening diseases, we can locate clinical trials our doctors may not be aware of.
     However, there’s also a lot of misleading information, and information that’s simply untrue. The internet is full of people selling things – supplements, treatment regimens that have not been rigorously tested, even prescription medications – and making false promises that have not been scrutinized by regulatory agencies. Sometimes, as in the case of some websites that promote “an anorexic diet” for “aggressive” weight loss, the information can encourage life-threatening behavior.
      Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy. Who but the patient could best decide what was right for him or her? But years of clinical – and personal – experience have taught me that information in and of itself is insufficient. Judgment is also indispensable, especially in complex situations, and the capacity for good judgment rests within people, not data sets.

(Doris Iarovici is a psychiatrist at Harvard University’s Counseling and
Mental Health Services and the author of Mental Health Issues and the
University Student. www.nytimes.com, 01.03.2018. Adaptado.)
No trecho do quarto parágrafo “the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source”, a expressão sublinhada equivale, em português, a
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798988 Inglês
Leia o texto para responder à questão. 

The challenge of doctor-patient relations in the internet age



     “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you,” my patient said. My patient, a 19-year-old student, had already taken time off from school because of her anxiety. I was her psychiatrist, with over two decades of experience treating university students, and had just explained my diagnostic impressions based on a lengthy evaluation. I’d recommended that she try a medicine I expected would help. I’d also laid out the risks and benefits of other treatment options. 
      “Do you have additional questions I can answer?” I asked. I wanted to let her know that’s why I was there, to cull the research, to help make sense of it. “No, I like to go online and look for myself,” she said.
     More and more, I see students turning away from the expertise that a live person can offer and instead turning to the vast and somehow more objective-seeming “expertise” of the digital world.
     In an age when journalism we don’t like can be dismissed as “fake news,” suggesting that the information we do like is most credible, regardless of its source, it’s not hard to understand why young people do this. The medical profession itself, under managed care, has played a role as well, providing less time for doctor-patient interactions and undermining the chances that a personal relationship and trust can develop. Under the guise of efficiency, medical test results are now often released directly to patients, sometimes before or even without the benefit of any interpretation.
     But there’s danger in trusting data over people, as there is in thinking the expertise of all people is equivalent. When it comes to health, digital natives may not be learning how to navigate effectively. And the consequences could be harmful.
    The availability of health data on the internet has its benefits. Online, for example, we can find explanations and solutions for symptoms we might be too embarrassed, or afraid, to discuss with another person, in person. Or, for lifethreatening diseases, we can locate clinical trials our doctors may not be aware of.
     However, there’s also a lot of misleading information, and information that’s simply untrue. The internet is full of people selling things – supplements, treatment regimens that have not been rigorously tested, even prescription medications – and making false promises that have not been scrutinized by regulatory agencies. Sometimes, as in the case of some websites that promote “an anorexic diet” for “aggressive” weight loss, the information can encourage life-threatening behavior.
      Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy. Who but the patient could best decide what was right for him or her? But years of clinical – and personal – experience have taught me that information in and of itself is insufficient. Judgment is also indispensable, especially in complex situations, and the capacity for good judgment rests within people, not data sets.

(Doris Iarovici is a psychiatrist at Harvard University’s Counseling and
Mental Health Services and the author of Mental Health Issues and the
University Student. www.nytimes.com, 01.03.2018. Adaptado.)
No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “Let me do some research and I’ll get back to you”, o termo sublinhado refere-se
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798986 Geografia
Analise um trecho da canção “As caravanas”, composta por Chico Buarque.
É um dia de real grandeza, tudo azul [...] Quando pinta em Copacabana [...]
A caravana do Irajá, o comboio da Penha. Não há barreira que retenha esses estranhos Suburbanos tipo muçulmanos do Jacarezinho [...]
Com negros torsos nus deixam em polvorosa A gente ordeira e virtuosa que apela Pra polícia despachar de volta O populacho pra favela Ou pra Benguela, ou pra Guiné. [...]
(Chico Buarque. “As caravanas”. Caravanas, 2017.)
Nessa letra, o compositor
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798985 Conhecimentos Gerais
A nova “autonomia” da juventude como uma camada social separada foi simbolizada por um fenômeno que, nessa escala, provavelmente não teve paralelo desde a era romântica do início do século XIX: o herói cuja vida e juventude acabavam juntas. Essa figura foi comum no que se tornou a expressão cultural característica da juventude – o rock. Buddy Holly, Janis Joplin, Brian Jones, membro dos Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix e várias outras divindades populares caíram vítimas de um estilo de vida fadado à morte precoce.
(Eric J. Hobsbawm. Era dos extremos, 1995. Adaptado.)
O autor descreve um fenômeno histórico que
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798984 História
A chegada de Adolf Hitler ao poder, em 30 de janeiro de 1933, é celebrada pelos nazistas como a aurora de uma nova era revolucionária. Imprensa, rádio e cinema são mobilizados para convencer o mundo de que o povo alemão inteiro ajusta o passo ao guia que ele escolheu. Manifestações grandiosas tendem a provar que, num mundo dividido por lutas econômicas e sociais, a Alemanha hitlerista fundou a sociedade unanimista, com a qual muitos europeus fora da Alemanha sonham.
(Henri Burgelin. “O sucesso da propaganda nazista”. In: A Alemanha de Hitler, 1991. Adaptado.)
O texto apresenta o nazismo vitorioso na Alemanha como
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798983 História
Na primeira República brasileira (1889-1930) associaram-se
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798982 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
O Rio de Janeiro, com seus 522 mil habitantes em 1890, constituía o único grande centro urbano. São Paulo tinha 65 mil habitantes. Mas a cidade começara uma arrancada de longo alcance, crescendo a uma taxa geométrica anual de 3%, entre 1872 e 1886, e de 8% entre 1886 e 1890.
(Boris Fausto. História do Brasil, 2012.)
O aumento demográfico de São Paulo no período mencionado no texto é resultado
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Ano: 2018 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: SÃO CAMILO Prova: VUNESP - 2018 - SÃO CAMILO - Processo Seletivo - 2º Semestre de 2018 - Medicina |
Q1798981 História
Em toda essa diversidade de aperfeiçoamentos tecnológicos, era evidente o caráter unívoco do movimento: a mudança gerava mudança. A oferta barata de carvão revelou-se uma dádiva dos céus para a indústria do ferro, que estava sendo asfixiada pela falta de combustível. Nesse meio tempo, a invenção e a difusão de motores a vapor na indústria têxtil criou uma nova procura de combustível, e, portanto, de carvão; e esses motores tinham um apetite voraz de ferro, o que reclamava mais carvão.
(David S. Landes. Prometeu desacorrentado, 1994. Adaptado.)
O historiador refere-se à primeira Revolução Industrial, destacando
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Respostas
10701: E
10702: C
10703: A
10704: E
10705: D
10706: B
10707: E
10708: B
10709: E
10710: D
10711: E
10712: E
10713: D
10714: C
10715: D
10716: C
10717: B
10718: D
10719: C
10720: E