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Natalia Alas

Traditional Japanese Music - Koto - Virtual Culture - Kids Web Japan - Web Japan - 1 views

  • Japanese styles of expression. Instruments were adapted and newly created to meet local needs, and the most important of these were the shamisen, shakuhachi, and koto.
  • The shakuhachi is a flute made of bamboo that's played by blowing on one end. There are four holes in the front and one in the back, and so it's sometimes called a "five-holed bamboo flute" in English. These five holes are enough to produce a complete range of sounds; in fact, it's the small number of holes that gives the shakuhachi its distinctively poignant tone.
  • The shamisen resembles a guitar; it has a long, thin neck and a small, rectangular body covered with skin. I
    • maria jose conde suarez
       
      it is very interesting because it is saying that that instrument is covered with real skin and iv never seen an instrument of that kind
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  • musical forms were imported from China more than a thousand years ago, but over the years, they were reshaped into distinctively
  • The shamisen resembles a guitar; it has a long, thin neck and a small, rectangular body covered with skin.
  • It was the 13-string koto that was carried to Japan during the Nara period (710-794).
    • Natalia Alas
       
      The koto had less strings before, but it then happen to had
  • koto, meanwhile, is a large, wooden instrument with 13 strings. It's around 160 centimeters
  • The left hand presses down on the strings to bend notes and create other effects.
  • Historians think the koto was born around the fifth to third century B.C. in China.
  • history of traditional music in Japan is rich and varied.
  • it came to be performed by itself.
  • commonly performed with the shamisen and shakuhachi or as accompaniment to songs.
  • Of the traditional instruments, the koto is probably the most familiar and popular.
  • Sadly, modern Japanese rarely hear these traditional instruments being played live these days.
  • Many musical forms were imported from China more than a thousand years ago
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    This shamisen is similar to a guitar in shape. It is used to play historical traditional japanese music.
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    the shakuhachi is made from bamboo
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    This is the information of the traditional japanese instruments and how are they played. The most important ones were Shamisen, Shakuhachi, and Koto. Koto is the most familiar and popular. I found this website very interesting!
edgar benitez

Peruvian Music - 0 views

    • silvana escobar
       
      This page, seems reliable and also very interesting. I believe it's an outstanding page!
  • For most people outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes
  • The dominant areas of Andean culture are Peru , Ecuador and Bolivia, the countries with the largest indigenous Amerindian populations in South America.
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  • Andean music can be divided roughly into three types. Firstly, that which is of indigenous origin , found mostly amongst rural Amerindian peoples still living very much by the seasons with root Amerindian beliefs; secondly music of European origin , and thirdly mestizo music, which continues to fuse the indigenous with European in a whole host of ways.
  •             For most peopl
  • e outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes.
  • most remarkable is that these instruments have been used to create music in various parts of this large area of mountains - which stretch 4500 miles from Venezula down to southernmost Chile - since before the time of the Incas. Pre-Conquest Andean instruments - conch shell trumpets, shakers which used nuts for rattles, ocarinas, wind instruments and drums - are ever present in museum collections. And the influence of the Inca Empire means that the Andean region and its music spreads far beyond the mountains themselves
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
  • Quechua (currently spoken by over six million people) and Aymara, both of which are spoken alongside Spanish and other Amerindian languages.
  • For most people outside Latin America the sound of the Andes is that of bamboo panpipes and quena flutes.
  • nstruments and drums
  • this large area of mountains -
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
    • Ana Sofia Perdomo
       
      peruvian intro
    • Ana Sofia Perdomo
       
      peruvian oldest musical tradition are those o the armendians of the andes. Their music
    • ana lucia arteaga luna
       
      peruvian music is divided in three parts
  • Peruvian oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes.
  • Use of different scales involving four, five, six and seven notes and different singing styles are also found from place to place, tied to specific ritual occasions and the music which goes with them.
  • an oldest musical traditions are those of the Amerindians of the Andes. Their music is best known outside the country through the characteristic panpipes of poncho-clad folklore groups. However, there's a multitude of rhythms and popular music found here deserve a lot more recognition, including and, still relatively unknown abroad, as well as the distinct coastal tradition of, rooted in black slaves brought to work in the mines.            
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    cool its insterting because it has a lots of facts
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    peruvian music is the oldest musical tradition of the Amerindians in the Andes.the music is known through the woodwind family, means panpipes and all that type of flutes.the Andes is a stretch of 4500 miles from Venezuela to chie.
Natalia Alas

A Look at the Koto - Koto - Virtual Culture - Kids Web Japan - Web Japan - 0 views

  • A Look at the Koto
  • names are written with Chinese characters meaning "dragon's tongue," "dragon's brow," and "dragon's horn."
  • The names for the parts of a koto were decided long ago by likening the instrument to a dragon stretched out along the ground.
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  • The names for the parts of a koto were decided long ago by likening the instrument to a dragon stretched out along the ground.
  • After the koto is strung, and the strings are run through holes in the instrument's body and tied off, the leftover string is placed here.
  • This section is the main body of the koto.
  • This section is the main body of the koto.
  • are written with Chinese characters meaning "dragon's tongue," "dragon's brow," and "dragon's horn."
  • tsume
    • Natalia Alas
       
      the name of the object with what you play the Koto with
  • These supports are slid up and down the instrument to adjust the sound of each string.
  • These supports are slid up and down the instrument to adjust the sound of each string.
  • they also help transmit the sound from the strings to the body of the koto, making it fuller and richer.
  • The koto is not played directly with the fingers.
  • The koto is not played directly with the fingers.
  • After the koto is strung, and the strings are run through holes in the instrument's body and tied off, the leftover string is placed here.
  • tsume
    • Natalia Alas
       
      this is what we use to play the Koto. You need three of them for your index finger, middle finger and thumb
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    This talks about the Koto, how we play it, the part, with what we play it, etc. It was fun reading it!!
ximenamartinez

WHO | Ebola virus disease - 0 views

shared by ximenamartinez on 17 Oct 14 - No Cached
  • Ebola virus disease Fact sheet N°103Updated September 2014 Key facts Ebola virus disease (EVD), formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever, is a severe, often fatal illness in humans. The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spreads in the human population through human-to-human transmission. The average EVD case fatality rate is around 50%. Case fatality rates have varied from 25% to 90% in past outbreaks. The first EVD outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa, near tropical rainforests, but the most recent outbreak in west Africa has involved major urban as well as rural areas. Community engagement is key to successfully controlling outbreaks. Good outbreak control relies on applying a package of interventions, namely case management, surveillance and contact tracing, a good laboratory service, safe burials and social mobilisation. Early supportive care with rehydration, symptomatic treatment improves survival. There is as yet no licensed treatment proven to neutralise the virus but a range of blood, immunological and drug therapies are under development. There are currently no licensed Ebola vaccines but 2 potential candidates are undergoing evaluation.
  • Ebola virus disease (EVD), formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever, is a severe, often fatal illness in humans. The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spreads in the human population through human-to-human transmission. The average EVD case fatality rate is around 50%. Case fatality rates have varied from 25% to 90% in past outbreaks. The first EVD outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa, near tropical rainforests, but the most recent outbreak in west Africa has involved major urban as well as rural areas.
    • ximenamartinez
       
      My current event is about Ebola, the virus outbreak which has now worldwide.
silvana escobar

New, Untreatable Chikungunya Virus In Caribbean Affects 4,600, Worries Tourism Officials - 1 views

  • The Aedes Aegypti mosquito spreads the Chikungunya virus between humans. Wikipedia
  • n untreatable mosquito-borne virus is spreading across the Caribbean, and has affected more than 4,600 people in a little over six months, according to a reports from the Pan American Health Organization. Never before seen in the Americas, the disease has officials and businesses worried about the islands' vital tourism industry.
  • The Chikungunya virus is a mosquito-borne infection similar to Dengue fever. The first cases of this outbreak were reported in December 2013 on the French side of St. Martin, and it has spread to 19 countries across the region, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which recommends that travelers protect themselves from mosquito bites in these areas.
    • silvana escobar
       
      One of the causes of the current event is a virus spread by mosquitos.
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  • “It has not been here before, so people are susceptible, there is no resistance and we have had a lot of the mosquitoes that transmit it,”
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    The Chikungunya is really similar to Dengue fever. It affected 4,600 people in the Caribbean and is spread by the Adese Aegypti mosquito.
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    The Chikungunya is really similar to Dengue fever. It affected 4,600 people in the Caribbean and is spread by the Adese Aegypti mosquito.
Beatriz Narvaez

Chikungunya - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The incubation period of chikungunya disease ranges from 2 to 12 days, typically two to three. The majority of those infected will develop symptoms.[11] Symptoms include a fever up to 40 °C (104 °F), petechial or maculopapular rash of the trunk and occasionally the limbs, and arthralgia or arthritis affecting multiple joints.[12] Other nonspecific symptoms can include headache, nausea, vomiting, conjunctivitis, slight photophobia, and partial loss of taste.[13] Ocular inflammation from chikungunya may present as iridocyclitis, or uveitis. Retinal lesions may also occur.[14] Swelling of legs is observed in many people, the cause of which remains obscure as it is not related to any cardiovascular, renal, or hepatic abnormalities. Typically, the fever lasts for two days and then ends abruptly. However, other symptoms, namely joint pain, intense headache, insomnia and an extreme degree of prostration, last for a variable period, usually about five to seven days.[12] People have complained of joint pains for much longer time periods, some as long as two years, depending on their age.[15][16] Recovery from the disease varies by age. Younger people recover within five to 15 days; middle-aged people recover in 1.0 to 2.5 months. Recovery is longer for the elderly. The severity of the disease, as well as its duration, is less in younger people and pregnant women. In pregnant women, no untoward effects are noticed after the infection.
  • Observations during recent epidemics have suggested chikungunya may cause long-term symptoms following acute infection. During the La Reunion outbreak in 2006, more than 50% of subjects over the age of 45 reported long-term musculoskeletal pain[17] with up to 60% of people reporting prolonged arthralgia three years following initial infection.[18] A study of imported cases in France reported that 59% of people still suffered from arthralgia two years after acute infection.[19] Following a local epidemic of chikungunya in Italy, 66% of people reported muscles pains, joint pains, or asthenia at one year after acute infection.[20] Long-term symptoms are not an entirely new observation; long-term arthritis was observed following an outbreak in 1979.[21] Common predictors of prolonged symptoms are increased age and prior rheumatological disease.[17][18][20][22] The cause of these chronic symptoms is currently not fully known. Markers of autoimmune or rheumatoid disease have not been found in people reporting chronic symptoms.[18][23] However, some evidence from humans and animal models suggests chikungunya may be able to establish chronic infections within the host. Viral antigen was detected in a muscle biopsy of a people suffering a recurrent episode of disease three months after initial onset.[24] Additionally, viral antigen and RNA were found in synovial macrophages of a person during a relapse of musculoskeletal disease 18 months after initial infection.[25] Several animal models have also suggested chikungunya virus may establish persistent infections. In a mouse model, viral RNA was detected specifically in joint-associated tissue for at least 16 weeks after inoculation, and was associated with chronic synovitis.[26] Similarly, another study reported detection of a viral reporter gene in joint tissue of mice for weeks after inoculation.[27] In a nonhuman primate model, chikungunya virus was found to persist in the spleen for at least six weeks.[28]
  • The most effective means of prevention are protection against contact with the disease-carrying mosquitoes and mosquito control.[9] These include using insect repellents with substances such as DEET (N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide; also known as N,N'-diethyl-3-methylbenzamide or NNDB), icaridin (also known as picaridin and KBR3023), PMD (p-menthane-3,8-diol, a substance derived from the lemon eucalyptus tree), or IR3535. Wearing bite-proof long sleeves and trousers also offers protection. In addition, garments can be treated with pyrethroids, a class of insecticides that often has repellent properties. Vaporized pyrethroids (for example in mosquito coils) are also insect repellents. Securing screens on windows and doors will help to keep mosquitoes out of the house. In the case of the day-active A. aegypti and A. albopictus, however, this will have only a limited effect, since many contacts between the mosquitoes and humans occur outside.
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  • In those who have more than two weeks of arthritis, ribavirin may be useful.[9] The effect of chloroquine is not clear.[9] It does not appear to help acute disease, but tentative evidence indicates it might help those with chronic arthritis.[9] Steroids do not appear useful, either.[9]
  • Currently, no specific treatment is available.[9] Attempts to relieve the symptoms include the use of NSAIDs such as naproxen or paracetamol (acetaminophen) and fluids.[9] Aspirin is not recommended.[57]
andres mejia

Chikungunya virus - symptoms, treatment and prevention :: SA Health - 0 views

    • andres mejia
       
      how is it spread: touch people infected by wave the hand of the person infected.
  • Humans and other primates are the natural hosts for the chikungunya virus. The virus is spread to humans by the bite of an infected female Aedes species mosquito – Aedes aegypti or Aedes albopictus. These are the same tropical and sub-tropical mosquitoes that carry the dengue virus. They breed in or near human habitations and prefer to feed on humans during the daytime in shady areas, but may also bite early in the night. In Australia, Aedes aegypti currently is found in north Queensland while Aedes albopictus is found in a few locations in the Torres Strait. Infections reported in Australia are from people who have travelled overseas to regions where the chikungunya virus is present. To date chikungunya virus infection has not been transmitted by mosquitoes in Australia. However, since the mosquitoes capable of transmitting the infection are found in northern Australia there is the potential for this to occur.
    • andres mejia
       
      here are some symtoms of the virus chikungunya like high fever,severe joint pain mainly in the arms and legs,headache,muscle pain,back pain,and rash (about 50% of affected people)
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  • Signs and symptoms Chikungunya infection is characterised by sudden onset of: high fever severe joint pain mainly in the arms and legs headache muscle pain back pain rash (about 50% of affected people).
    • andres mejia
       
      here are some treatment for the chikungunya.
Natalia Alas

Japan's Latest Pop-Music Craze? Kids - Patrick St. Michel - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • Video
  • Mana Ashida is the most famous child in Japan
  • The seven-year-old has starred in a dozen movies over the past three years,
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  • Alongside Marumo co-star and fellow seven-year-old Fuku Suzuki, she recorded the hit "Maru Maru Mori Mori!,"
  • But Ashida's biggest claim to ubiquity is music
  • Ashida and Suzuki the youngest artists to ever appear in the Japanese music charts' top 10.
  • Ashida, who released her latest song on May 16, stands as an extreme example of the Japanese music industry's recent embrace of young performers.
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    Mana Ashida is the most famous child in Japan, and that's saying something.
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    Mana Ashida is the most famous child in japan.He is 7 year old he hva made dozen of movies over last three years.Ashida starts to play music because he really want to sing.He made a song with marumo co-star and it was a hit called maru maru mori mori.
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    Mana Ashida are the most famous kids in Japan.They have seven years old.They have been in a dozen movies.
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    Mana Ashida are the most famous kids in Japan.They have seven years old.They have been in a dozen movies.
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    Mana Ashida are the most famous kids in Japan.They have seven years old.They have been in a dozen movies.
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    pop japanese music information
Jennifer Garcia

Ebola: 'We're at an absolute tipping point,' warns David Miliband | World news | The Gu... - 2 views

  • “One of the things that has become starkly clear to me in my visit is that there’s no grey area here between controlling the disease on the one hand and widespread disaster on the other. We’re at an absolute tipping point where either the disease is contained to the low tens of thousands, or it becomes an epidemic of a very serious kind.”
    • Jennifer Garcia
       
      This is the former foreign secretary of the UK reporting from Liberia and Sierra Leone on the Ebola outbreak to the Guardian. 
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    This is the former foreign secretary of the UK reporting from Liberia and Sierra Leone on the Ebola outbreak to the Guardian. 
ximenamartinez

Ebola epidemic may not end without developing vaccine, scientist warns | World news | T... - 0 views

  • Ebola epidemic may not end without developing vaccine, scientist warns Professor Peter Piot, one of the scientists who discovered Ebola, claims scale of outbreak has got ‘completely out of hand’
  • The Ebola epidemic, which is out of control in three countries and directly threatening 15 others, may not end until the world has a vaccine against the disease, according to one of the scientists who discovered the virus.
    • ximenamartinez
       
      Ebola is out of control and threatens 3 countries and immediately 15 others. 
  • Professor Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said it would not have been difficult to contain the outbreak if those on the ground and the UN had acted promptly earlier this year. “Something that is easy to control got completely out of hand,” said Piot, who was part of a team that identified the causes of the first outbreak of Ebola in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo, in 1976 and helped bring it to an end.
    • ximenamartinez
       
      Peter Piot knew Ebola was out of hand in 1976 when the first Ebola outbreak happened in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. 
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  • Dr Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in evidence to Congress, said he was confident the outbreak would be checked in the US, but stressed the need to halt the raging west African epidemic. “There are no shortcuts in the control of Ebola and it is not easy to control it. To protect the United States we need to stop it at its source,” he said.
    • ximenamartinez
       
      Tom Frieden Director of CDC says Ebola has no shortcuts and it is not easy to control.
camila cruz

About Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever| Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever | CDC - 0 views

shared by camila cruz on 24 Oct 14 - No Cached
  • Ebola, previously known as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, is a rare and deadly disease caused by infection with one of the Ebola virus strains. Ebola can cause disease in humans and nonhuman primates (monkeys, gorillas, and chimpanzees).
  • Ebola, previously known as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, is a rare and deadly disease caused by infection with one of the Ebola virus strains. Ebola can cause disease in humans and nonhuman primates (monkeys, gorillas, and chimpanzees).Ebola is caused by infection with a virus of the family Filoviridae, genus Ebolavirus. There are five identified Ebola virus species, four of which are known to cause disease in humans: Ebola virus (Zaire ebolavirus); Sudan virus (Sudan ebolavirus); Taï Forest virus (Taï Forest ebolavirus, formerly Côte d’Ivoire ebolavirus); and Bundibugyo virus (Bundibugyo ebolavirus). The fifth, Reston virus (Reston ebolavirus), has caused disease in nonhuman primates, but not in humans.Ebola viruses are found in several African countries. Ebola was first discovered in 1976 near the Ebola River in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Since then, outbreaks have appeared sporadically in Africa.The natural reservoir host of Ebola virus remains unknown. However, on the basis of evidence and the nature of similar viruses, researchers believe that the virus is animal-borne and that bats are the most likely reservoir. Four of the five virus strains occur in an animal host native to Africa.
    • camila cruz
       
      some information about the ebola disease
gabopro1402

Painful chikungunya virus spreading rapidly in Caribbean | Fox News - 0 views

  • Hospitals and clinics throughout the Caribbean are seeing thousands of people with the same symptoms, victims of a virus with a long and unfamiliar name that has been spread rapidly by mosquitoes across the islands after the first locally transmitted case was confirmed in December.
  • "It is terrible, I have never in my life gotten such an illness," said Maria Norde, a 66-year-old woman confined to bed at her home on the lush eastern Caribbean island of Dominica. "All my joints are in pain."
  • Outbreaks of the virus have long made people miserable in Africa and Asia.
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  • One thing is certain: The virus has found fertile ground in the Caribbean, where it is rapidly spreading. The Pan American Health Organization reports more than 55,000 suspected and confirmed cases since December throughout the islands.
  • Chikungunya was identified in Africa in 1953 and is found throughout the tropics of the Eastern Hemisphere.
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    Hospitals and clinics throughout the Caribbean are seeing thousands of people with the same symptoms, victims of a virus with a long and unfamiliar name that has been spread rapidly by mosquitoes across the islands after the first locally transmitted case was confirmed in December. The Caribbean suffering a lot since december lets help them
andres mejia

Chinese music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Musical instruments were traditionally classified into 8 categories known as bayin.[2] Traditional music in China is played on solo instruments or in small ensembles of plucked and bowed stringed instruments, flutes, and various cymbals, gongs, and drums. The scale is pentatonic. Bamboo pipes and qin are among the oldest known musical instruments from China; instruments are traditionally divided into categories based on their material of composition: animal skins, gourd, bamboo, wood, silk, earth/clay, metal, and stone. Chinese orchestras traditionally consist of bowed strings, woodwinds, plucked strings and percussion.
  • The term guoyue, or national music, became popular in early 20th century and was used loosely to include all music written for Chinese instruments in response to a particular nationalistic consciousness.[11] The term however may have slightly different meaning when used by different Chinese communities. Originally it is used only referred to the music of the Han Chinese, later it may also include music of various ethnic minorities in China. In the new Republic of China in Taiwan, Guoyue emphasized music of the mainland China over the Taiwanese local traditions. In mainland China a new term minyue (民乐, short for minzu yinyue or "people's music") was coined post-1949 in place of guoyue to encompass all compositions and genres for traditional instruments. In other Chinese communities, it may also be referred to as huayue (for example in Singapore) or zhongyue (in Hong Kong)
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    come here and read it 
ivanna salome

Andean music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Andean music is a group of styles of music from the Andes region in Southamerica.
    • ivanna salome
       
      the style of the andean music is from south america 
  • Andean music has served as a major source of inspiration for the neo-folkloric Nueva canción movement that begun in the 60s, Nueva canción musicians both interpreted old songs and created new pieces that are now considered andean music. Some Nueva canción musicians such as Los Jaivas would fuse Andean music with psychedelic and progressive rock.
    • Gabriela Rodriguez
       
      nueva cancion fact 
  • The panpipes group include the sikú (or zampoña) and antara. These are ancient indigenous instruments that vary in size, tuning and style. Instruments in this group are constructed from aquatic reeds found in many lakes in the Andean Region of South America. The sikú has two rows of canes and are tuned in either pentatonic or diatonic scales. Some modern single-rowed panpipes modeled after the native Antara are capable of playing full scales, while traditional Sikús are played using two rows of canes wrapped together.
    • ivanna salome
       
      the different instruments in andean are pinpipes siku zampona and antara
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  • Quenas (notched-end flutes) remain popular and are traditionally made out of the same aquatic canes as the Sikús, although PVC pipe is sometimes used due to its resistance to heat, cold and humidity.
  • It includes folklore music of parts of Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Chile, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela. Andean music is popular to different degrees across Latin America,
  • The Nueva Canción movement of the 70s revived the genre across Latin America and brought it to places where it was unknown or forgotten.
  • quenas only are played during the
  • dry season
  • vertical flutes, either pinkillos or tarkas, being played during the wet season.
  • Tarkas are constructed from local Andean hard wood sources
  • Marching bands dominated by drums and panpipes are commonplace today and are used to celebrate weddings, carnivals and other holidays.
  • The twentieth century saw drastic changes in Andean society and culture. Bolivia, for example, saw a nationalistic revolution in 1952,
  • Los Curacas took the fusion work of Los Jairas and the Parras to invent nueva canción, which returned to Bolivia in the 1980s in the form of canto nuevo artists such as Emma Junaro and Matilde Casazola.
  • The 1970s was a decade in which Andean music saw its biggest growth.
  • Different groups sprang out of the different villages throughout the Andes Region. Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Bolivia, Colombia and Argentina.
  • hey would later take Andean music to the rest of the world.
  • Originally from the Caribbean coast of Colombia, cumbia became a hit in Peru and through much of Latin America. It was then adapted to a "Peruvian" version called "Chicha" that has become a popular style in the Andean region, specially among in the lower socioeconomic strata of the society including Quechua and Aymara populations
airi shibata

Can coffee stimulate renewable energy in Central America? | Global Development Professi... - 1 views

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    The event that I chose is about the coffee as renewable energy. Even though its the second valuable commodity its an environmental impact because they're cutting down the plantations. This helps the people with money but doesn't help the environment, there will be less oxygen for humans. Farmers and people who exports the coffee are involved in this problem.One of the opnion was that "Coffee waste water generates a considerable amount of greenhouse gases, particularly methane. However, this same waste water is rich in organic matter, which can be harnessed to generate biogas via anaerobic decomposition."
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    Nobody disagrees about the coffee as the renewable energy. Mostly all the people say that its a correct thing to do. In the future we should cut some trees but also plant some of the seeds we cut from.
Nicolle Elahian

Top 10 British artists in America right now | TheCelebrityCafe.com - 0 views

  • Home Cafepedia Celebrities Movies News Sports TV News Music Gossip Hollywood Relationship Features News Sports TV News Movies Music Hollywood Gossip Relationships Special
  • It’s hard to say when we as a country started to become obsessed with British artists, but it is certainly true that we have. You almost can’t listen to the radio nowadays without hearing at least one British artist, if not more. Boy bands like One Direction and The Wanted have pretty much taken over, making teenage girls go crazy and selling out concerts like it’s nothing. Solo acts such as Ed Sheeran and Cher Lloyd have been gaining popularity as well, performing on countless television and award shows. You can’t forget the more seasoned artists like Adele and Jessie J, who have proven that some of the best voices come from across the pond. Breaking America has been seen as a big accomplishment for British artists in the past, but with our willingness to accept them nowadays, it is not quite as hard as it used to be! Of course, it is still an admirable accomplishment and I am sure that the British craze will not die down anytime soon. Let’s take a look at some of the most popular British artists of the moment.
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    It gives a lot of information of artists which are important because their music has gone to America and beyond
camila cruz

Outbreaks | Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever | CDC - 0 views

  • Current Outbreaks West Africa The 2014 Ebola outbreak is the largest Ebola outbreak in history and the first Ebola outbreak in West Africa. This outbreak is the first Ebola epidemic the world has ever known.
    • camila cruz
       
      these was somethinng said by the CDC
    • camila cruz
       
      these is something said by the CDC
jose david hernandez

Transmission | Chikungunya virus | CDC - 0 views

  • Transmission  Through mosquito bites Chikungunya virus is transmitted to people through mosquito bites. Mosquitoes become infected when they feed on a person already infected with the virus. Infected mosquitoes can then spread the virus to other people through bites. Chikungunya virus is most often spread to people by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. These are the same mosquitoes that transmit dengue virus. They bite mostly during the daytime.
    • jose david hernandez
       
      common way of virus transmition
  • Rarely, from mother to child Chikungunya virus is transmitted rarely from mother to newborn around the time of birth. Rarely, through infected blood In theory, the virus could be spread through a blood transfusion.  To date, there are no known reports of this happening. 
    • jose david hernandez
       
      rarely  ways chikugunya transmits
christopher2020

BBC News - Hungry US bullfrog invasion spreads - 0 views

  • The bullfrogs not only eat other frogs, but also compete against various animals for food and spread a fungus believed to cause a significant decline in amphibian populations.
  • The bullfrogs not only eat other frogs, but also compete against various animals for food and spread a fungus believed to cause a significant decline in amphibian populations.
    • christopher2020
       
      What is one of the causes of this current event? The bullfrogs not only eat other frogs,but also compete against various animals for food and spread a fungus believed to cause a significant decline in amphibian populations
    • christopher2020
       
      What is one of the outcomes of this current event so far? "They are going to eat anything they can fit into their mounts. It doesn't matter if it's another frog or a bird or a mosquito," US Geological Survey biologist Adam Sepulveda told the Associated Press news agency.
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    • christopher2020
       
      Think about what you have learned about this current event so far. Think about the different sides and opinions involved. What is your opinion about this event?I think they should trap all the hungry bullfrogs and safe the amphibian population.
  •  
    Scientists are reporting an invasion of hungry American bullfrogs along the Yellowstone River in the US state of Montana. The bullfrogs are said to eat nearly anything, including other bullfrogs, and pose a threat to native species. The number of the animal's breeding sites has nearly quadrupled since 2010.
ximenamartinez

Ebola Survival Rates: Why Patients' Outcomes Vary - 0 views

  • The overall survival rate of the current Ebola outbreak, the largest in history with more than 9,200 confirmed or suspected cases, is around 50 percent, according to the World Health Organization. That's a better outcome than most previous outbreaks, many of which had survival rates less than 30 percent. Sierra Leone’s survival rate is currently about 65 percent. Guinea’s hovers around 50 percent, and Liberia’s is around 40 percent, the WHO reports.
  • hat's a better outcome than most previous outbreaks, many of which had survival rates less than 30 percent.
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