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2023·全国·模拟预测
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了古人类学家发现了阿法南猿Lucy的过程以及对Lucy死亡原因的推测。

1 . On 2 November 1974, Dr. Donald Johanson, a paleoanthropologist (古人类学家), with his student Tom Gray, was there, in Hadar in Ethiopia, a volcanic region home to ancient humans. The pair had been out exploring and had decided to walk back to their car via a valley. As they walked, they noticed an elbow bone sticking out. Nearby, they found pieces of a skull, ribs, a thigh bone, a pelvis and a jaw. It took weeks of careful work to recover all the pieces, and they found almost half of a skeleton.

On the night of this incredible discovery, Johanson and the team listened to The Beatles’ Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds on their tape deck (录音机). Inspiration struck, and that’s how this famous fossil got her name.

Lucy was a member of a species called Australopithecus afarensis (阿法南猿), and she lived more than 3 million years ago. The wear on her wisdom teeth shows that she was fully mature when she died, but she would have grown up quickly. She was probably only around 12 years old and weighed just 29 kilograms (64 pounds), barely half as much as a human female. Her brain was only one-third of the size of ours, and her face was ape-like, with a powerful jaw. She had curved fingers, and marks on her upper arm bone show that her muscles were strong, both showing that she was a competent climber.

How did Lucy die? Anthropologist (人类学家) John Kappelman and his colleagues think that she might have fallen from a tree. There are cracks in her bones and according to Kappelman’s reconstruction, Lucy fell from a height of 15 metres (50 feet) and hit the ground feet first. She broke both her ankles and knees.

The trouble with this theory is that it’s hard to prove. According to other researchers, the damage to her bones could also have occurred after she died.

1. Why did Johanson and the team name it Lucy?
A.Because it was found in Hadar in Ethiopia.B.Because they took weeks to recover the pieces.
C.Because it looked like half of a skeleton.D.Because they were listening to that song then.
2. What do we know about Lucy?
A.She was an over-twelve-year-old fully mature adult.
B.Compared with humans in weight, she was much lighter.
C.With one-third of the size of our brain, she was smarter.
D.She was only competent in climbing with curved fingers.
3. How did Lucy die?
A.The fall from a tree killed her.B.She fell and hit the ground.
C.Her ankles and knees broke.D.No one knows for sure.
4. What is the text mainly about?
A.The discovery of Lucy and her death.B.The scientists’ exploration in Hadar.
C.The pieces of a skull were found by accident.D.The theory of the cause of Lucy’s death.
2023-05-07更新 | 24次组卷 | 1卷引用:2023年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试临考押题卷(A)英语试题
2023·全国·模拟预测
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是说明文。文章主要介绍了科学家对有关人类烹饪的最早证据的新发现,文章介绍了这一发现的意义和科学家们提出的设想。

2 . Scientists found what could be the oldest evidence of cooking at the edge of the ancient Lake Hula in Israel at the Gesher Benot Ya’aqov, according to a newly-published paper. The remains, especially fish teeth, were discovered near places where scientists also found signs of fire. Tests showed the teeth had been exposed to temperatures that were hot, but not super-hot. This suggested the fish were cooked slowly over a low heat, rather than being put right onto a fire.

With all the evidence together, scientists concluded that these ancient humans had used fire for cooking some 780,000 years ago. That is much earlier than the next oldest evidence for cooking, about 170,000 years ago, which showed Stone Age humans ate burnt roots in South Africa.

Scientists believe cooking started long before this, though physical evidence has been hard to come by —considering the importance of using fire to cook. Cooked food makes it easier for the body to digest and get more nutrients. When early humans figured out how to cook, they were able to get more energy, which they could use to fuel bigger brains. Based on how human ancestors’ bodies developed, scientists guess that cooking skills would have had to appear nearly 2 million years ago.

Those first cooked meals were a far cry from today’s dinners. And at that time, humans started eating not just for fuel, but for their community. In a 2010 paper, scientists described the earliest evidence of a feast(盛宴), which was a specially prepared meal that brought people together for an event in a cave. This “first feast” came at an important turning point in human history, right as hunter-gatherers were starting to settle into more permanent living situations. Gathering for special meals may have been a way to build community and reduce tensions now that people lived closer to each other. Scientists believe ancient feasts served a lot of the same social uses that modern gatherings serve: People exchange information, make connections, or try to improve their position.

1. Which is probably the earliest evidence of cooking?
A.The tools of cooking.B.The signs of fire.
C.The leftover fish.D.The burnt roots.
2. What message is conveyed in paragraph 3?
A.Food is key to keeping brains’ functioning.B.Using fire to cook is a universal practice.
C.Our understanding of ancestors is limited.D.Cooking is the driving force for human evolution.
3. What do scientists say about ancient feasts?
A.They mark important events.B.They have multiple functions.
C.They differ from modern gatherings.D.They display excellent cooking skills.
4. Why does the author write this text?
A.To inform readers of a new discovery.
B.To explain why early humans started to cook.
C.To present how cooking makes us together.
D.To stress the importance of fire to human life.
书面表达-读后续写 | 适中(0.65) |
3 . 阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。

I love digging in the back garden. Sometimes, I’d dig for pottery and stuff, but I’ve always wanted to find a fossil (化石). I like finding out about the past. At school, my favourite subject is history. I’ve been watching Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures since I was three. I knew I had a good chance of finding a fossil, because my house was built on a muddy, limestone substrate (石灰岩基质), in Walsall, which means millions of years ago, my garden wasn’t my garden at all—it was a coral reef (珊瑚礁).

On 22 March, it was a sunny day. I came back from school. I asked Dad if I could dig in my favourite spot by the yellow bush near our house, where we had planted potatoes and onions, but he told me not to, because he’d just moved a tree there and it was establishing roots. I went to the back garden instead, taking Dad’s old brown wooden garden tools. I dug a big hole, about a foot deep, which didn’t take very long, where I found a ball of mud with something pointy sticking out the top. I ran into the kitchen screaming. I was so excited. I knew it was a fossil.

At first, I thought it might be a deer’s tooth or a goat’s claw. When Dad washed the mud off, we saw that it had lots of bumpy, wavy lines; we both thought it looked like one of the sea anemones, from the fish tank in his office, but with a horn(触角). Dad sent a video to the Fossil Finds UK Facebook group. A man calling himself an archaeologist (考古学家) replied saying it had the markings of a horn coral from the Palaeozoic era, which is the very beginnings of life on Earth. I had found one of the oldest fossils in England.

We looked in my books and online for more information. We typed our postcode into a British Geology Survey search where you can find out what you’re standing on—ours is the oldest substrate in the area, with lots of clay and limestone, but it’s unusual to find anything so close to the surface. Experts told us that my horn coral lived between 415 million and 480 million years ago. There weren’t even proper fish or sharks then.


注意:
1. 续写词数应为150左右;
2. 请按如下格式作答。

Before the horn coral, the only fossils I was familiar with were shark teeth that Dad got me.


________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

When I grow up, I want to be an archaeologist (考古学家).


________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
语法填空-短文语填(约180词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文主要介绍了西藏的一些遗迹,这些遗迹解开了西藏和中国其他地方的文化交流。
4 . 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

The Potala Palace (布达拉宫) features a wall painting     1     illustrates a historic marriage between members of the Han and Tibetan ethnic groups. Like the wall painting, many other relics in Tibet have also helped     2    (far) uncover cultural communication between Tibet and the rest of China.

    3    (original) built in the eighth century, the Samye Monastery is listed as an example of a combination of cultural heritage and architectural styles, while the Shalu Monastery, set up in 1087, is another example of a mix of architectural styles.

The earliest archaeological site     4    (identify) at the heart of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (高原) so far is the Nwya Devu site. More than 4,000 stone artifacts (石器)     5    (find) at the Paleolithic site since 2016. Scientific analysis shows that the site     6    (date) back to some 40,000 years ago.

Archaeological     7    (discovery) have also provided abundant evidence of cultural integration. For example, the wooden carving unearthed from Tibet’s Ngari and those from Xinjiang are similar     8     shape.

The cultural     9    (connect) between Tibet and the Yellow River basin was proved at the Karub ruins with the finding of a crop planted in northern China. The finding proved     10     communication between the plateau and northern China some 5,000 years ago.

2023-05-03更新 | 72次组卷 | 1卷引用:河南省信阳市2022-2023学年高二下学期期中考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道,主要讲的是日本考古学家在奈良市附近的一座古墓中发现了一把7.5英尺长的铁剑和一面铜镜。

5 . Japanese archaeologists (考古学家) have uncovered al 7.5-foot-long irons sword and a bronze mirror from an ancient tomb near the city of Nara. Researchers found both artifacts while unearthing a l,600-year-old site called Tomio Maruyama.

The weapon, known as a dako sword, is so large that it was likely never used for self-defense, serving instead as a means of protection against evil after death. Like other dako swords unearthed in the country, this one looks like a snake. Due to the artifact’s size, the researchers initially thought they had found multiple swords lined up next to each other.

Experts said the mirror, which is shaped like a shield (盾), was also likely used to shun evil spirits. It measures 25 inches by 12 inches and weighs more than 12 pounds, making it the largest of its kind discovered in Japan, too.

The finds offer new insights into the Kofun period, which lasted from around the year 250 AD to 538 AD and is named for the distinctive tomb mounds, constructed to bury members of the ruling class. Kosaku Okabayashi, the deputy director for Nara prefecture’s Archaeological Institute of Kashihara, said, “These discoveries indicate that the technology of the Kofun period is beyond what had been imagined, and they are masterpieces in metalwork from that period.”

Japan is home to an estimated 160,000 burial mounds from the Kofun period, though the Tomio Maruyama kofun is particularly large. Measuring 350 feet in diameter and up to 32 feet tall, it dates back to the late fourth century.

Archaeologists think it has some connection to an influential person who supported the rulers of the day, the imperial Yamato family. Based on the presence of the two artifacts, the dead person may have been involved in military and ritualistic matters. So far, the researchers have discovered a coffin but no human remains in the burial chamber.

1. How did researchers find an irons sword and a bronze mirror?
A.By exploring an old tomb.
B.By asking experienced local villagers.
C.By searching for much information online.
D.By carefully studying historical materials.
2. What do we know about the iron sword?
A.It is in a very small size.
B.It looks like a sharp shield.
C.It was mainly used for self-defense.
D.It might be used to drive the evil away.
3. What does the underlined word “shun” in paragraph 3mean?
A.Schedule.B.Design.C.Avoid.D.Express.
4. What is Kosaku Okabayashi’s attitude towards the two discoveries in paragraph 4?
A.Negative.B.Appreciative.C.Unclear.D.Indifferent.
2023高二·全国·专题练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了在“自拍”发明的几千年前,人们就开始关注自己呈现给世界的形象。古埃及的统治者让艺术家雕刻他们的肖像,以装饰他们的坟墓和保存他们的形象。

6 . Even thousands of years before the “selfie” was invented, people were concerned with the image of themselves they presented to the world. The rulers of ancient Egypt had artists carve portraits of them to decorate their tombs and preserve their images even after death.

King Tutankhamen lived more than 3,000 years ago. He ruled ancient Egypt for 10 years, until his death at age 19. “King Tut” remained practically unknown in the modern world until 1922, when scientists discovered his tomb, buried and forgotten for centuries. The treasures inside gave the world the first detailed picture of ancient Egyptian life.

The ancient Egyptians worshipped (崇拜) many gods. They also believed that all people had a life spirit, called “ka” that needed a place to live after the body died. Tombs inside huge pyramids protected the pharaohs’ (法老) ka. The ka could also exist in portrait sculptures like the one of a seated Hatshepsut. The wife of a pharaoh, Hatshepsut took on the role of king after her husband died. Carved from limestone, this life-size sculpture shows the life force of Hatshepsut’s ka. The artist suggests Hatshepsut’s strength by placing her feet firmly on the ground and resting her hands on her knees in a firm, powerful pose.

Viewers are meant to look at the sculpture of Hatshepsut from a frontal angle only. But artist Thutmose created his portrait of Queen Nefertiti as a sculpture in the round, meaning viewers should observe it from many points of view. The work is a highly realistic portrait of a queen who ruled beside her husband, a pharaoh. Painted with delicate features, the impressive colors in her portrait resemble the makeup Nefertiti probably wore in life.

Long before any of these portraits were created, a huge creature with a lion’s body and a human head stood guarding in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. No one knows who created the Great Sphinx, or why, but it is said to resemble an early pharaoh. Carved out of solid rock on a large-than-life scale, it is possibly the oldest and most imposing portrait in the world.

1. The artist presents Hatshepsut’s strength mainly through the ________ of the sculpture.
A.gestureB.materialC.colorD.size
2. According to the passage, the portrait of Nefertiti was ________.
A.imaginativeB.lifelikeC.threateningD.abstract
3. The Great Sphinx might be ________.
A.a king of animalsB.a guard as brave as a lion
C.a portrait of an early pharaohD.a creature owned by a pharaoh
2023-05-03更新 | 19次组卷 | 1卷引用:外研版2019 选择性必修四 Unit 5 第三课时 基础练
2023高二·全国·专题练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约270词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了埃及一组研究人员的新发现——一种四足鲸。文章介绍了这种物种的特点以及研究人员对这种生物的看法。

7 . A new four-legged whale species was recently discovered by a team of researchers in Egypt. The fossil which was encased in a tomb of rock dates back to over 43 million years ago!

This ancient creature had four functional legs, so it could dwell on both land and in water. Ironically, Egypt’s Fayum Depression, the desert where the fossil was discovered, was an ocean millions of years ago.

Researchers believe this fossil is an example from an era when land animals were adapting to marine life. Modern whales evolved from deer-like land mammals over the course of millions of years, and this unique whale could travel across land and swim in the ocean.

The new species is named Phiomicetus Anubis because the whale’s skull resembles the Egyptian jackal-headed god of death, Anubis. Scientists have also been able to recover the whale’s partial skeleton. They inferred that the ancient whale was about three meters in length and weighed 1,300 pounds. The mammal had a long mouthful of teeth, which indicated that it fed on smaller mammals and other sea life.

After analyzing the remains at Mansoura University in the Nile River Delta, scientists supposed that P. Anubis is the oldest semi-aquatic whale species found in Africa. Although the fossil itself was discovered thirteen years ago, researchers just completed the analysis and made the exciting announcement of a new species. Other whale fossils with legs have been found before, but the P. Anubis is the earliest, of its kind found in Africa.

1. Where did the researchers find the fossil?
A.In the India Ocean.B.On the Rock Islands.
C.In the Fayum Depression.D.In the Nile River Delta.
2. What helped scientists figure out Phiomicetus Anubis’s diet?
A.Its weight.B.Its length.C.Its teeth.D.Its legs.
3. What can we infer from the text?
A.The study of Phiomicetus Anubis is time-consuming.
B.The analysis of Phiomicetus Anubis has a long way to go.
C.Phiomicetus Anubis is the oldest mammal found in Africa.
D.Phiomicetus Anubis is the world’s largest semi-aquatic whale species.
2023-05-03更新 | 70次组卷 | 2卷引用:外研版2019 选择性必修四 Unit 5 第二课时 巩固练
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。科学家发现了一把约3700年前的梳子,上面写着由七个单词组成的迦南语句子。这是迄今为止发现的最古老的关于使用迦南语字母的证明。

8 . A seven-word sentence was discovered on a 3,700-year-old comb (梳子),which is likely the oldest known sentence written in letters,according to a new study. The sentence is in Canaanite (迦南语),which is the source (来源) of later letter systems in European languages.

The comb was first discovered in 2016 in Israeli. However,it wasn’t until 2021 that a researcher from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem first noticed the words when checking the photo of the comb. The researchers were not able to directly date the comb. They believed it dated from around 1700 BC based on comparison of the letters with those on pottery (陶器) with a known age.

Garfinkel,a professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,said,“The Canaanites invented the letters. Nowadays every person in the world can read and write using the letter system. This is really one of the most important achievements of humankind. When you are writing in English,you’re really using Canaanite.”

Small groups of Canaanite letters discovered on broken pieces of pottery before did not leave much room for further research on the lives of the Canaanites. But this find of a sentence written in the first letter-based language opens up the debate about the history during the ancient time period.

Garfinkel said,“The sentence was found on an ivory comb in the ancient city’s palace and temple area,which could suggest that only wealthy men were able to read and write.” The earliest writing system started around 5,000 years ago,which relied on hundreds of pictographs (象形文字) to represent words,ideas and sounds. Canaanites were the first to use letters in their writing system. “It shows that even in the most ancient times there were full sentences,which further suggests that Canaanites stood out among the early civilizations in their use of the written word.”

1. What do we know about Canaanite?
A.It has a history of 3,700 years.B.It is the oldest known language.
C.Its sentences are in many languages.D.Its letters are still in use at present.
2. How was the complete sentence in Canaanite found?
A.It was discovered on some pottery.B.It was identified on a comb in 2016.
C.It was recognized when dating the comb.D.It was recognized on a photo of the comb.
3. What does paragraph 3 mainly focus on?
A.The influence of Canaanite letters.
B.The rules of using Canaanite letters.
C.The problem in identifying the Canaanite sentence.
D.The explanation of the discovered Canaanite sentence.
4. What does Garfinkel think of the new discovery in the last paragraph?
A.Useless.B.Meaningful.C.Confusing.D.Unacceptable.
语法填空-短文语填(约220词) | 适中(0.65) |
9 . 语法填空

The Mysteries of the Maya

Extending south from parts of what we now know as Mexico into Central America, Maya civilisation     1     (surround) by mystery since its rediscovery in the 19th century. The Maya built     2    (impress) palaces and temples.     3     is most extraordinary about these complex structures is how they were built without the use of wheels, metal tools or even animal power. They applied their understanding of mathematics and astronomy     4     the Maya calendar, which was accurate to within 30 seconds per year. On top of all this was an achievement unique in the Americas at that time: a true writing system. It was a writing system so complicated that, so far, no one has been able to interpret it     5     (complete).

The fact that Maya society was technologically primitive makes its achievements more incredible and mysterious. Meanwhile, the rise and fall of this civilisation must also leave us     6     (think) about our past, present and future. By 700 AD, Maya civilisation was at     7     (it) peak. Yet, within a couple of generations, it began to mysteriously decline. The cities were left     8     (take) back by the jungle.

Some research seems to indicate that the Maya people themselves may have played a part in their downfall. Research also suggests that those natural     9     (disaster) may have led to the decline of the Maya.     10     the reasons, Maya civilisation largely disappeared within the deep jungle.

语法填空-短文语填(约180词) | 较易(0.85) |
10 . 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

URUMQI-After packing some naan bread and    1     dented water bottle, Shan Zhizheng and his wife start up their motorcycle and head off to a cultural relic site,     2     (break) the silence that envelops the valley.

It’s a round trip of around 150 kilometers and    3     (they) starting point is the pastoral and farming landscape of Wenquan county in Bortala,Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region(维吾尔自治区).

    4     (know) as “a museum without walls”, Wenquan county is home to nearly 260 cultural relic sites under    5     (variety) levels of protection, including tombs, cliff paintings and    6     (ruin),    7     provide materials for researching the history of ancient northern nomads and tribes, according to the county cultural relic protection bureau.

Shan and his wife, Yuan Qin, are responsible for protecting one particular relic site that    8     (cover) about eight square kilometers. Once a week, the couple patrols more than 200 ancient tombs dating back     9     between the Warring States Period (475-221 BC) and the Han Dynasty (202 BC-AD 220).

Their relic protection routine usually includes walking around the site to look for footprints and motorcycle tracks, keeping records of the tombs,     10     updating the local cultural relic authorities in a timely manner.

2023-04-22更新 | 94次组卷 | 1卷引用:河北省保定市六校联盟2022-2023学年高一下学期4月期中英语试题
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