martes, 7 de marzo de 2017

Unit 7. Machines. Natural Science.


SIMPLE MACHINES







SIMPLE MACHINES SONG




SIMPLE AND COMPLEX MACHINES



SIMPLE AND COMPLEX MACHINES SONG





VOCABULARY
- Machine
- Pulley
- Inclined plane
- Lever
- Wheel
- Axel
- Wedge
- Screw
- Rope
- Chain
- Lift
- Lower
- Ramp
- Up/down
- Rigid bar
- Fulcrum
- Pivot point
- Load
- Scissors
- Seesaws
- Wheelbarrow
- Bottle opener
- Nutcracker
- Tongs
- Tweezers


SIMPLE MACHINES



















COMPLEX MACHINES

Complex machines are made of many parts. These parts usually include the motor, the operating parts, the cover, the screens and indicators, the structure 
and the control components.
They perform more complex tasks than simple machines, 
and they normally work with electricity or fuel.
















lunes, 6 de marzo de 2017

Unit 7. Ancient History of Spain. The Iberians and the Celts. Social Science





VOCABULARY

The Iberians
The Celts
Iberian Peninsula
Inhabit
Tribes
Chief
Fortified settlements
Crop farmer
Livestock farmer
Craftsmen
Warrior
Trader
Fort
Walled towns
The Lady of Elche
Headdress
Bust
Coil
Priestess
The Bulls of Guisando







The mysterious Lady of Elche



In 1897, archaeologists uncovered a stunning artifact on a private estate at L'Alcúdia in Valencia, Spain. This find was a statue – a bust of a woman’s head. Believed to date back to the 4 th Century BC, the bust features a woman wearing an elaborate headdress. Now seen as one of Spain’s most famous icons, the bust is known as the Lady of Elche.
It is said that a young boy of fourteen had overturned a stone when he came across the bust. The bust shows the woman’s head, neck and shoulders, and extends down to her chest. However, it is possible that the bust was originally part of a larger, full-body statue.
The complex headdress features two large coils known as “rodetes” on either side of the head and face. It is thought that this was a ceremonial headdress, and that the woman may be a priestess. The headdress runs across the forehead, some pieces hang in front of the ears, and elaborate necklaces grace her chest. The woman’s face contains an expressionless gaze, and when it was found, contained traces of red, white, and blue decorative paint. The composition of the stone indicates that it was carved at L'Alcúdia.
The origin of the sculpture is puzzling, some suggest that the sculpture is Iberian, and may be associated with Tanit, the goddess of Carthage.







BULLS OF GUISANDO



The Bulls of Guisando are a set of celtiberian sculptures located on the hill of Guisando in the municipality of El TiembloÁvilaSpain. The four sculptures, made of granite, represent quadrupeds identified as bulls.
The Bulls of Guisando are examples of a type of ancient sculpture. They are associated with the territory of a celtiberian tribe called the Vettones. The Bulls may have been made during the 2nd century BC. 
The field around the Bulls was the place where the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando was signed between Henry IV of Castile and his half-sister Isabella of Castile on September 18, 1468, which granted her the title of Princess of Asturias thus ending a civil war in Castile.