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Kamaiurá oca. Oca is the name given to the typical Brazilian indigenous housing. The term comes from the Tupi-Guarani language family.. They are large buildings, serving as collective housing for several families, [1] and may reach 40 m (130 ft) in length. [2]
The Obstacle Collision Avoidance System (OCAS) is designed to alert pilots if their aircraft is in immediate danger of flying into an obstacle. OCAS uses a low power ground-based radar to provide detection and tracking of an aircraft's proximity to an obstacle such as high buildings , power line crossings, telecom towers or wind turbines .
Around 4:20 (), a densely packed bus –an extra-urban transport unit– owned by Transportes Tineca Sociedad Anónima and carrying more than 70 passengers was going into Guatemala City from El Progreso Department [a], [8] when it collided with other vehicles and fell approximately 20 meters (65 feet) off of Puente Belice, a highway bridge that crosses over a road in Las Vacas River, [2] a ...
OCAS or Ocas may refer to: Obstacle Collision Avoidance System , audio visual beacons designed to alert pilots in immediate danger of flying into an obstacle Ontario College Application Service , a non-profit corporation
OCAS Application Services, formerly known as the Ontario College Application Service (OCAS) is a non-profit corporation created in 1991 by the Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology and Institutes of Technology and Advanced Learning in the province of Ontario, Canada. [1] OCAS represents Ontario's 24 Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology (CAAT).
Portal da Transparência (Portuguese pronunciation: [poʁˈtaw dɐ tɾɐ̃spaˈɾẽsiɐ]) is a Brazilian government portal dedicated to making public all expenditures of the federal government. It has a list of all expenses and money transfers the federal government has made, including the list of all people receiving Bolsa Família benefits ...
Life's Vanquished, 1888.Left to right: sitting, Guerra Junqueiro, The Count of Sabugosa, José Maria de Eça de Queirós, The Count of Arnoso; standing, The Marquis of Soveral, Ramalho Ortigão, Carlos de Lima Mayer, The Count of Ficalho; on the stairs, Carlos Lobo de Ávila, and Oliveira Martins (António Cândido is missing)
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