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Anhanguera Educacional (Portuguese pronunciation: [aɲɐ̃ˈɡwɛɾa] or [aɲɐ̃ˈɡwɛɾa edukasjoˈnaw]) is the second-largest private for-profit educational company in Brazil by number of students, with around 400,000 students in its education network.
Anhanguera was a fish-eating animal with a wingspan of about 4.6 meters (15 ft). [3] Like many other anhanguerids, Anhanguera had rounded crests at front of its upper and lower jaws, which were filled with angled, conical but curved teeth of various sizes and orientations. Like many of its relatives, the jaws were tapered in width, but expanded ...
Anhanguera, Goiás, a municipality in the state of Goiás; Anhanguera (district of São Paulo), a district in São Paulo; Parque Anhanguera, a municipal park in São Paulo; Rede Anhanguera de Comunicação (RAC), a mass communication company from Campinas; Rodovia Anhanguera, a highway in the state of São Paulo
Anhangueridae is a group of pterosaurs within the suborder Pterodactyloidea. [2] They were among the last pterosaurs to possess teeth. A recent study discussing the group considered the Anhangueridae to be typified by a premaxillary crest and a lateral expansion in the distal rostrum.
The Anhanguera-Uniderp University is a private university in Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil established in 1974 and controlled by the private educational group Anhanguera. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] References
Anhanguera (Portuguese pronunciation ⓘ) is a municipality in south Goiás state, Brazil. In 2020 the population was 1,190 and the total area of the municipality was 57.0 km 2 , making it the smallest municipality in the state of Goiás and the smallest in all Central-West Brazil , both in population and area.
The similar Anhanguera possessed jaws that were tapered in width, but expanded into a broad, spoon-shaped rosette at the tip. The jaws are distinguished from its relatives by several differences in the crest and teeth: unlike its close relatives Coloborhynchus and Ornithocheirus , the crest on the upper jaw of Anhanguera didn't begin at the tip ...
O. cuvieri and many other English pterosaurs were kept in the genus Ornithocheirus for most of the 20th century. [2] In 1987, the German palaeontologist Peter Wellnhofer described the new crested pterosaur Tropeognathus from the Santana Formation of Brazil and noted the similarities between it and other newly described Brazilian taxa such as Anhanguera to English taxa that were based on ...