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Sports

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Football  is the most popular sport in Brazil national  football team , governed by the Confederação Brasileira de Futebol, has won the FIFA World Cup a record 5 times, in 1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, and 2002, and is the only team to succeed in qualifying for every FIFA World Cup competition ever held.                                                                                          

Gastronomy

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Is characterized by African, Amerindian, Asian (mostly Japanese) and European influence. It varies greatly by region, reflecting the country's mix of native and immigrant populations, and it's continental size as well. This has created a national cuisine marke by the preservation of regional differences. Coxinhas Brigadeiros Pão de queijo

Ecosystem of Brazil

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                                                          ECOSYSTEM OF BRAZIL  Amazon Forest - The Amazon rainforest, covering much of northwestern Brazil, is a moist broadleaf   forest in the Amazon biome that covers most of the Amazon basin of South America.                                         Atlantic Forest - The Atlantic forest, includes the semicaducifolius seasonal forest, originally, it was the forest of larger latitudinal extension of the planet, ranging from south latitudes of 6 to 32 degrees.                                          Marshland - The marshland Mato-Grossense is the largest plain of continuous flood on the planet, covered by mainly open vegetation that occupies 1,8% of the national territory.    

HISTORY OF BRAZIL

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Historians and scientists have discovered that communities of people were living in what is now known as Brazil as long as 8 000 years ago. Thes first traceable human beings were nomadic and semi-nomadic people who are believed to have come from parts of Asia in search of abundant hunting grounds. They were called Indians by the Portuguese, when this European nation eventually arrived. To get to South America from Asia, they had to cross the Pacific Ocean. Individual indigenous tribes and settlements numbered around 2 000 when the Portuguese first discovered Brazil, as it came to be known. When these Europeans arrived in the 16th century, they found themselves amidst a people that practiced cannibalism, were involved in tribal warfare and would fight for the popular brazilwood tree for its valuable red dye. Therefore, these new arrivals felt it was necessary to "civilize" the natives. They also immediately began to indulge in sexual relations with these ones, creating