[…] According to the National Institute for Space Research, the number of fires detected in Brazil so far this year is 84 percent higher than in the comparable period last year; more than half of those are in the Amazon region. More than 1,300 new fires were added over the course of just two days this week. Satellites have captured images of the smoke from the flames sweeping across several Brazilian states. In São Paulo, where I live, dark clouds blackened the sun on Monday, turning day into night. The city is thousands of miles away from the Amazon. Meteorologists scrambled to explain what had happened, but many suspect that the culprit was low-lying clouds from a cold front combining with smoke. […]
By Vanessa Barbara. The New York Times, Aug. 24, 2019.
Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/24/ opinion/sunday/amazon-fire.html?searchResultPosition= 5&login=facebook&auth=login-facebook. Accessed on: Sept. 7, 2019.
A jornalista Vanessa Barbara estrutura o parágrafo anterior de forma que sua função comunicativa seja
corrigir uma publicação incorreta do Inpe não condizente com novos dados de satélite.
contradizer dados de satélites que podem ter sido vítimas de suposta manipulação.
informar o leitor que os focos de incêndio na Amazônia aumentaram exponencialmente.
esclarecer a origem da poluição atmosférica estacionada sobre a cidade de São Paulo.
modificar a opinião do leitor sobre os incêndios na Floresta Amazônica e em São Paulo.