1 . A huge section of the Milne Ice Shelf, located on Ellesmere Island in the northern Canada, collapsed into the Arctic Ocean, according to the Canadian Ice Service. This created an “ice island” which is about 30 square miles in size. As a comparison, Manhattan Island is about 23 square miles.
“Entire cities are that size. These are big pieces of ice,” Luke Copland, a glaciologist at the University of Ottawa who was part of the research team studying the ice shelf, told Reuters. “This was the largest remaining intact (完整的) ice shelf, and it’s collapsed, basically. ”
The Canadian Ice Service said on Twitter that “above-normal air temperatures, offshore winds and open water in front of the ice shelf are all part of the recipe for the ice shelf to break up.” A huge section of the Milne Ice Shelf has collapsed into the Arctic Ocean, producing a 30-square-mile ice island.
The ice shelf has now been reduced in area by about 43%. An ice shelf is a thick slab of ice, attached to a coastline and extending out over the ocean, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. “Some shelves have existed for thousands of years,” the center said.
So what’s going on up there? Though the planet is warming worldwide due to climate change, the Arctic has been warming at a rate twice that of the rest of the world. This summer has been particularly warm: Arctic sea ice melted to its lowest July level on record and in June, a town in Siberia soared (急升) to 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit, believed to be a record high for the Arctic.
“When I first visited those ice caps, they seemed like such a permanent fixture of the landscape,” Mark Serreze, director of the NSIDC and geographer at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said in a statement. “To watch them die in less than 40 years just blows me away.”
1. Why does the author mention Manhattan Island in Paragraph 1?A.To stress that Manhattan Island is vital for Canada. |
B.To introduce where Manhattan Island locates. |
C.To say the great collapse is terrible. |
D.To compare two different places. |
A.Its location. |
B.Its huge body. |
C.Special intact form. |
D.Higher air temperatures. |
A.Arctic sea ice melted to its lowest in June. |
B.Climate change brings about great changes. |
C.The earth is warming because of the loss of ice shelf. |
D.The Arctic warms more slowly than the rest of the world. |
A.Shocked. | B.Humorous. |
C.Scientific. | D.Neutral. |
2 . Brisbane is an exciting city, voted as one of the most livable cities in Australia. Its fine food will make you hate to leave. Here are four famous restaurants.
Kingsleys Steak & Crab House
Located on the waterfront of the Brisbane River with views of the Story Bridge, Kingsleys Steak & Crab House supplies an incomparable ideal setting for lunch or dinner. With impressive views and a combination of both indoor and outdoor seating, it attracts a lot of tourists to have a unique dining experience here. It also offers fresh seafood, including Alaska king crabs, high-grade wine and friendly staff.
Rates per person: $35 — $45
Moo Moo The Wine Bar
Moo Moo The Wine Bar is an award-winning chain of lakeside dining sites. Originally, it was founded in 2005 by Steven Adams, a well-known chef. Moo Moo has since claimed many awards, including Queensland’s Best Steak Restaurant 2008, Gold Riverside Restaurant of the Year 2007, and Gold Coast’s Best Steak Restaurant.
Rates per person: $40-$45
Jellyfish Restaurant
The beautiful views over the Brisbane River are just a starter to come from Jellyfish Restaurant. Its aim is to source and serve fishes of 8 species daily, to learn and understand the texture and qualities of each species and recommend the best way to cook to its customers and serve for the fine experience.
Rates per person: $30-$45
Tibetian Kitchen
For a fine dining experience in Brisbane, it is hard to go past Tibetian Kitchen founded by the award-winning well-known chef Matt Moran. With a beautiful setting on the bank of the Brisbane River, Tibetian Kitchen is all about beautifully presented dishes which look like pieces of perfect artwork. This is what Tibetian Kitchen differs from other restaurants above.
Rates per person: $35-$45
1. What makes Kingsleys Steak & Crab House attractive to tourists?A.Its great seafood. | B.Its friendly service. |
C.Its high-grade wine. | D.Its beautiful dining surroundings. |
A.Kingsleys Steak & Crab House. | B.Moo Moo The Wine Bar. |
C.Jellyfish Restaurant. | D.Tibetian Kitchen. |
A.Its environment is elegant. | B.Its food rates are much lower. |
C.Its chefs have won many awards. | D.Its food presentation is rather pleasing. |
3 . Malin Pinsky had the first of two lightbulb moments in 2003 while crossing Drake Passage. He was then standing on the bridge of a research ship and was scanning the sky for seabirds, which was one of his duties as a research technician on the cruise (海上航游). Just five months earlier he had finished college, where he studied biology and environmental science.
As the ship entered nutrient-rich Antarctic waters, whales suddenly showed up all around the ship. That moment on the bridge helped him realize that the ocean looks featureless from the top, but there’s so much going on underneath.
The second lightbulb moment hit him several months later. Pinsky was then an intern (实习生) in Washington, D.C. His job was making photocopies. It was around the time when two big reports had come out. Both focused on what policies might best preserve U.S. ocean resources. “I realized we have all these laws and policies that determine how we as a society interact with the ocean. But they’re far out of date. We don’t yet have the science to know what the new policy should be,” Pinsky said.
Today he runs a lab with about 20 workers. His team wants to seek how our changing climate, as well as overfishing and habitat destruction, might be driving changes in fish and other animals in the sea. To find out, team members travel each year to coral reefs near the Philippines. There, they carefully catalog populations of different fish. They collect data on the growth and mating of these fish, their diversity and other factors.
“Pinsky’s broad approach to the problem — looking at species, where they live and how fisheries are managed — is setting the pace for other scientists,” says Kimberly Oremus, a fishery economist at the University of Delaware in Newark. “Pinsky is pushing the whole field to respond to his growing body of research.”
1. What made Pinsky have the first lightbulb moment?A.The vastness of the ocean. |
B.The sight of seabirds in the sky. |
C.The view of Drake Passage. |
D.The appearance of whales around the ship. |
A.He needed to take more photos of oceans. |
B.He should do something to update ocean policies. |
C.The U.S. ocean resources need to be better preserved. |
D.There have already been perfect policies to preserve the ocean. |
A.The harm of overfishing. |
B.Features of different fish. |
C.Factors affecting ocean ecosystems. |
D.The reasons for global warming. |
A.Positive. | B.Doubtful. | C.Disapproving. | D.Uninterested. |
4 . A year back I received a full scholarship to attend the University of San Francisco. All of my hard work had paid off. My mom had spent a lot in my attending a private high school, so I made sure to push myself: I volunteered, joined different clubs, and graduated with honors.
I was so excited to start a new life. I had totally packed two weeks and wanted to go to college at once before it was time to leave.
Soon enough, the big day came, but it wasn’t like what I had thought. The first two weeks were the most difficult days of my entire life. Every night I would cry myself to sleep.
I was so homesick (想家) and I didn’t know how to deal with my broken heart. To distract myself, I threw myself into my studies and I applied for a lot of jobs. In any remaining free time, I started forcing myself to the gym. I wanted to keep every part of my day busy so I wouldn’t think how lonely I felt.
Soon after, I began to limit food, and then I became worse. Finally, I went to see a doctor. When the doctor weighed me, I was crazy about the number of my weight. So I continued to lower my goal, and convinced that controlling this number was the solution to my homesickness. But when I was told that I had no choice but to spend time on my studies. I quickly started recovery in my mind.
How could I do? I told myself that school was what I was best at. I decided to get rid of my homesickness and took exercise actively. My first term of college had passed by at last and I had gotten straight A’s. That’s why I want to share my story—to help other students feel less lonely.
1. How was the author during the two weeks before she left for the college?A.She was as normal as before. |
B.She couldn’t wait to leave for the college. |
C.She was afraid to leave her home. |
D.She didn’t enjoy her mother’s company. |
A.Her weight. | B.Her diet. |
C.Her homesickness. | D.Her bad study habit. |
A.achieve my dream | B.earn money by myself |
C.improve my studies | D.take my attention away |
A.To look back at her past middle school life. |
B.To help girls to lose weight. |
C.To help lonely college students. |
D.To increase her own confidence. |
5 . In Lauderdale lives a young girl, Mary Lou. She is a(n)
It all started when her family moved to a new neighborhood. Mary would feel very
She became deeply attracted to bird-watching in Grade Six when she had to write a book for a school project. She decided to write something she knew: the mockingbird. The homework was just the
Every morning Mary takes her binoculars (望远镜) and heads out to
Mary usually uses her binoculars to
When Mary was writing her bird book for children, she studied hard by searching the Internet. She also
A.experienced | B.independent | C.intelligent | D.normal |
A.selective | B.knowledgeable | C.patient | D.flexible |
A.inspiring | B.diverse | C.commercial | D.amazing |
A.proud | B.joyful | C.lonely | D.hesitant |
A.respond to | B.settle into | C.figure out | D.go off |
A.schedule | B.process | C.lesson | D.beginning |
A.feed on | B.give way to | C.look for | D.clean up |
A.mistakes | B.noises | C.descriptions | D.traps |
A.hopeful | B.pleased | C.scared | D.disappointed |
A.identify | B.gather | C.analyze | D.master |
A.observing | B.impressing | C.exchanging | D.describing |
A.journalist | B.expert | C.tourist | D.designer |
A.power | B.imagination | C.secrets | D.improvement |
A.collected | B.rescued | C.kept | D.illustrated |
A.study | B.publish | C.complain | D.efforts |
6 . It is the stock response to a parent struggling with a crying baby or a bad-tempered teenager: “Treasure every moment because they grow up so fast.” Now researchers have found there may be something in the old saying. Watching children grow up really does seem to make time fly. Scientists have found that parents feel time passing more quickly than non-parents.
The findings could be due to the fact that children change fast. “Over ten years, children go through dramatic changes not only in their physical appearance, but also in their understanding abilities and their status, ” the researchers said. The results could also be a consequence of parents spending a large amount of their time on their children, they said, even though they found no difference in the time pressures recorded by parents compared with non-parents in the study.
For the study, published in the journal Timing & Time Perception (感知), the researchers asked 431 people aged from 20 to 59 to fill in a subjective time questionnaire, a tool used by psychologists to measure time perception. They were asked: “How fast did the last ten years pass for you?” An answer of very slowly gave a score of-2; slowly was-I; neither fast nor slow was 0; fast was I and very fast scored 2. So the higher the score, the faster they felt time had passed. The parents had an average score of I. 22, compared with 0. 76 for the non-parents.
Participants were also asked how quickly the last year, month and week had passed, but there were no differences between the groups for these shorter intervals (间隔). Previous studies have suggested that time also seems to speed up when we get older. Research published in 2019 by Duke University in North Carolina suggests this could be due to physical changes in our bodies, with a slowdown in image processing speeding up our perception of time passing.
Days that seemed to last forever in our youth were “not due to experiences being much deeper or meaningful”, the researcher Adrian Bejan said, “but due to the fact that they were being processed rapidly.”
1. What probably makes parents feel time passing more quickly than non-parents?A.The pressure of raising children. | B.Devoting much time to children. |
C.The slowdown in image processing. | D.Noticing children’s daily physical growth. |
A.Time seems to speed up for the young. |
B.Parents responded differently to the old saying. |
C.Non-parents have deeper experiences. |
D.The older people are, the higher scores they may get. |
A.Experiences. | B.Researchers. | C.Days. | D.Youths. |
A.The perception of time passing. |
B.Teenagers experience dramatic changes. |
C.Time really flies when you are having children. |
D.Comparison between parents and non-parents. |
7 . Draper, the owner of a second-hand bookstore, was sorting through a pile of old books when an envelope fell from one. Inside was an undated
Tears were welling up in Draper's eyes. These were a
He supposed if the
He started with the local newspaper. The Northern Echo ran the story of the
A.message | B.email | C.postcard | D.letter |
A.reading | B.destroying | C.forgetting | D.copying |
A.determined | B.kind | C.selfish | D.dying |
A.find | B.introduce | C.phone | D.comfort |
A.enjoy | B.avoid | C.want | D.like |
A.tear up | B.throw away | C.cut up | D.pull out |
A.book | B.girl | C.reporter | D.news |
A.hardly | B.accidentally | C.unfortunately | D.actually |
A.author | B.picture | C.teacher | D.stranger |
A.wet | B.valuable | C.lost | D.broken |
A.However | B.Therefore | C.Meanwhile | D.Eventually |
A.when | B.why | C.where | D.how |
A.ticket | B.magazine | C.homework | D.article |
A.vocabularies | B.terms | C.words | D.languages |
A.writing | B.dreaming | C.joking | D.playing |
8 . Scientists have long known that a crow (乌鸦)native to New Caledonia is able to use tools. The birds use them to remove food from deep holes. Now, American researchers have discovered a second species of crow with the same ability. They reported on their experiments with Alala crows, which are from the Hawaiian Islands.
In the experiment, the researchers placed pieces of food in holes inside the wood. The holes were too deep for the crows to reach with their beaks(鸟喙). But, by using small pieces of wood held in their beaks, Alala crows quickly got the food. They used small objects as tools, sometimes changing them by shortening too-long sticks. They also made tools from plant materials.
“The crows use their beaks as people use thumbs on their hands. Tool use is rare in the animal kingdom. ” said Chritian Rutz of University of St. Andrews. “Current evidence strongly suggests that tool use is part of the species’ natural behavioral pattern(行为模式). These birds had no special training in the study, yet most of them were skilled at handling stick tools. ”
Bird experts claim finding out that the crows use tools is important discovery. “It makes us rethink how to look at the whole tool-use idea now and encourages us to go out and look for things that we may have ignored before. ”
All the Alala crows left in the world live in Hawaii. There were less than 20 Alalas left in the late 1990s when scientists decided to bring them into a protected area. Now, it is reported that there are over 100 birds living there. Scientists plan to release a small number of the birds back into the wild later.
1. What are the findings of American researchers?A.Alala crows can also use tools. |
B.It’s difficult for birds to look for food. |
C.New Caledonia is home to some crows. |
D.The Hawaiian Islands are full of rare birds. |
A.The holes were very big and wide. |
B.Alala crows could only use short sticks. |
C.Alala crows got the food by working together. |
D.Alala crows would deal with tools if necessary. |
A.Using tools comes naturally to Alala crows. |
B.Using stick tools is not easy for Alala crows. |
C.Alala crows’ beaks look like people’s hands. |
D.Alala crows won’t use tools without being trained. |
A.Move all of them out of Hawaii. | B.Increase the population of them. |
C.Set some of them free in nature. | D.Build more protected areas for them. |
9 . When I was in elementary school, I enjoyed telling lies. That was a lot of
In my usual fashion, I told him lies just like telling other people. I made up
One day he told me ,”I can’t talk to you on the
That was how I learned the
A.pride | B.relief | C.care | D.fun |
A.blaming | B.lying | C.struggling | D.designing |
A.changed | B.spread | C.returned | D.completed |
A.helped out | B.put away | C.looked up to | D.caught up with |
A.orders | B.stories | C.poems | D.songs |
A.though | B.while | C.because | D.but |
A.stage | B.ground | C.phone | D.street |
A.nearly | B.gradually | C.slowly | D.really |
A.friendship | B.journey | C.love | D.discussion |
A.proved | B.promised | C.prayed | D.imagined |
A.hard | B.smooth | C.frequent | D.violent |
A.At once | B.At first | C.For long | D.In time |
A.cost | B.tradition | C.value | D.condition |
A.lonely | B.careful | C.powerful | D.independent |
A.true | B.lucky | C.possible | D.silly |
10 . Just over 12 months ago I gave myself a challenge: give up spending on all but the essentials for a whole year. It hasn't always been easy, but a year on I am wealthier and wiser. Embarrassingly, I have also realised just how much money I've squandered down the pubs in restaurants and through mindless shopping.
Free of any financial worries, I was spending without thinking. Stuck in a cycle of consumerism, I was struggling in vain to spend my way to happiness. Giving up spending for a year was an extreme approach, but I wanted to taste extreme frugality, shake up my spending patterns and overpay my mortgage instead of shopping. I could continue to pay my bills, including mortgages, broadband(宽带), phone bill, charity donations, life insurances, money to help my family and basic groceries.
It was not easy, especially in the first few months. There were lows, such as when I missed my favourite jazz concerts and hit films. There have also been some awkward moments when I've turned up to a friend's house for dinner empty-handed. I did a lot of washing up at my friends' houses in return this year.
I did find new ways to live, however. Using sites such as Eventbrite I have been to film screenings, wine tasting evenings and theatre productions for free. Living in London I have a wealth of free cultural activities on my doorstep and I've been to more art exhibitions this year than ever before. I even managed a free holiday, cycling the
Suffolk and Norfolk coast and camping on beaches. It's something I'd never done before and probably wouldn't have, were it not for the challenge.
The last 12 months have taught me what things I really need. I can honestly say I' m happier now. I've gained confidence and skills, done things and met lovely people I wouldn't have otherwise done or met.
1. In the past the author wasted much money on the following EXCEPT .A.purposeless shopping | B.basic groceries |
C.restaurants | D.pubs |
A.try to form a virtue of frugality | B.change her former spending habits |
C.pay off her mortgage as soon as possible | D.reserve money for her everyday bills |
A.She did a lot of washing and cooking in pubs. |
B.She tried cycling and camping for the first time. |
C.She explored more cultural activities in London. |
D.She attended concerts and wine evenings for free. |
A.It's discouraging. | B.It's challenging. |
C.It's beneficial. | D.It's embarrassing. |