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阅读理解-阅读单选(约500词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章通过Shahid Ali捡垃圾为引入,说明了全球垃圾贸易基本上已经崩溃的事实。

1 . THE GLOBAL WASTE TRADE IS ESSENTIALLY BROKEN

Cut into hillside in northern Malaysia stands a large, open-air warehouse. This is a recycling factory, which opened last November. On a very hot afternoon in January, Shahid Ali was working his very first week on the job. He stood knee-deep in soggy, white bits of plastic. Around him, more bits floated of the conveyor belt and fell to the ground like snowflakes.

Hour after hour, Ali sorts through the plastic jumble moving down the belt, picking out pieces that look off-color or soiled-rejects (废品) in the recycling process. Though it looks like backbreaking work, Ali says it is a great improvement over his previous job, folding bed-sheets in a nearby textile factory, for much lower pay. Now, if he eats simply, he can save money from his wages of just over $l an hour and send $250 a month to his parents and six brothers and sisters in Peshawar, Pakistan, 2,700 miles away, “As soon as I heard about this work, I asked for a job,” says Ali, 24, a bearded man with glasses and an easy smile. Still, he’s working 12 hours a day, seven days a week. “If I take a day off, I lose a day’s wages,” he says.

In the warehouse, hundreds of bags are stacked more than 60 feet high-each stuffed with plastic wrappers and bags thrown away weeks earlier by their original users in California. The fact that the waste has traveled to this distant corner of the planet in the first place shows how badly the global recycling economy has failed to keep pace with humanity’s plastics addiction. This is an ecosystem that is deeply dysfunctional, if not on the point of collapse: About 90% of the millions of tons of plastic the world produces every year will eventually end up not recycled, but burned, buried, or dumped.

Plastic recycling enjoys ever-wider support among consumers: Putting yogurt containers and juice bottles in a blue bin is an eco-friendly act of faith in millions of households. But faith goes only so far. The tidal wave of plastic items that enters the recycling stream each year is increasingly likely to fall right back out again, casualties of a broken market. Many products that consumers believe (and industries claim) are “recyclable" are in reality not, because of hard economics. With oil and gas prices near 20-year lows, so-called virgin plastic, a product of petroleum feed-stocks, is now far cheaper and easier to obtain than recycled material. That unforeseen shift has yanked the financial rug out from under what was until recently a practical recycling industry. “The global waste trade is essentially broken,” says the head of the global plastics campaign at Greenpeace. “We are sitting on vast amounts of plastic with nowhere to send it and nothing to do with it.”

1. What is the author’s attitude towards Shahid Ali?
A.Critical.B.Merciless.C.Indifferent.D.Sympathetic.
2. What most probably causes the problem of global waste recycling?
A.The prices of oil and gas have been increasing.
B.Tons of wastes travel so far before being recycled.
C.Recyclable products are not really recycled.
D.Governments don’t support the recycling industry.
3. What does the italicized word “dysfunctional” mean in the passage?
A.Out of stock.B.Far from pleased.C.Full of energy.D.Out of order.
4. What is the author’s purpose of writing this article?
A.To illustrate how plastic waste has been recycled in the world.
B.To warn people that the global waste trade is essentially broken.
C.To analyze the relationship between consumers and factories.
D.To solve the conflict between the recycling industry and governments.
2024-04-21更新 | 88次组卷 | 2卷引用:2024届上海市长宁区高三下学期二模英语试卷
阅读理解-六选四(约200词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。介绍了一些自然的锁住二氧化碳的方法。

2 . Greening the blue

Is there a “natural” way to enhance the potential of the oceans to lock away climate-warming CO2? Planting more trees on land can help draw down more CO2 from the atmosphere—the basis of many plans for carbon credits that companies buy to offset their emissions (抵消其排放).     1     Seaweed forests and saltmarshes (盐碱滩) are common examples.

Some regard the potential for this “blue carbon” as huge, although as yet there is no mechanism for integrating it into carbon offsetting plans. John Virdin of Duke University in North Carolina says, “    2    ” He adds, “You have to go out and measure all the carbon that’s there, you have to show that it’s not going to be lost, you have to keep monitoring it.” Virdin and others have proposed extending an existing land-based plan called REDD + (reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation) to the ocean, but that is an idea whose ship has yet to sail.

    3     In March, the UK government’s climate adviser, the Climate Change Committee, found that restoring and creating seagrass and saltmarsh ecosystems in the country would only lock away a small amount of CO2, removing “well below” 1 million tonnes a year. Nonetheless, these are efficient carbon stores according to the committee.     4    

A.Using the oceans as a solution to climate change is hardly a new idea.
B.There is still some doubt about how big the marine offsetting effect might be.
C.It’s really hard to turn blue carbon conservation and restoration into carbon credits that you can sell.
D.Something similar might work in the oceans, by stimulating the growth of marine and coastal ecosystems.
E.And conserving them is important given how much fishing and other activities have degraded them.
F.The big objection to all these plans is the possibility of negative environmental side effects.
2023-04-17更新 | 162次组卷 | 1卷引用:2023届上海市长宁区高三下学期二模英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约450词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是篇记叙文。San Ignacio是少数几个人们可以抚摸鲸鱼的地方之一,文章讲述了作者和孩子在San Ignacio 的一段和鲸鱼互动的海上之旅,展现了人与自然界的和谐共处。

3 . “It’s a windy day in Laguna San Ignacio, and the waves seem to come from all directions,” said Sara Clemence in Bloomberg Businessweek. My children and I are riding on a 18-foot boat—small enough that we can reach down into the water if a gray whale swims up alongside. And then we see what we’ve come for: a heart-shaped shower of water and a dark mass rushing below it. As instructed, we splash (溅泼) the water strongly to signal the huge whale, which turns out to be a mother with her weeks-old baby. The baby soon swims beneath our boat, emerges to blow mist in my face, then “lies onto its side like a 2-ton puppy.” Leaning down, I touched its skin gently. “It feels electric. Also, a bit like petting a hard-boiled egg.”

San Ignacio is one of very few places where a person can pet a whale. The whales come each year to the coast of Baja California to give birth and to mate. If you’re lucky, you can “shake hands with a leatheryfin (鳍)” or even “plant a kiss on a cold, salty cheek.” I usually worry about such interactions, because wild creatures can become deeply stressed by human contact. But boat numbers are strictly limited in these protected waters.   And any whale that approaches a boat does so on its own terms. Like that baby whale: “We see him a few times, and he seems to like being petted and splashed.”

So we are two species, connecting through touch, but also through eye contact: “More than once, after nosing around our boat, a young gray turns on its side so one dark, baseball-size eye is looking up at us.” Whalers   used   to   call   gray   whales   “devil   fish”   because   these   magnificent   creatures   turn   violent   when threatened—“or, say, when their babies are harmed.” That makes it feel even more of a blessing when, on our third day there, a large mama whale approaches the boat. “I’m splashing when I feel her nose press up into my hand.” Though she’s “wiser and apparently more alert” than her child, “she still decides to trust us.”

1. Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
A.The writer was on a whale-touching trip.
B.The writer’s boat went down with a huge wave.
C.The baby whale splashed water all over the writer.
D.The mother whale’s skin felt as hard as a boiled egg.
2. By “does so on its own terms” (in paragraph 2), the writer means whales in San Ignacio are ______.
A.mad with too many visitorsB.ready for hands-on attention
C.restricted in swimming routesD.enclosed in their safety zones
3. Gray whales got the name of “devil fish” from their ______.
A.strange appearanceB.inborn violence
C.surprisingly enormous sizeD.fierceness in danger
4. The writer’s implied purpose in the passage is to ______.
A.popularize the knowledge of whalesB.show admiration for whales’ motherhood
C.share an experience of the sea voyageD.advocate harmony between man and nature
2022-12-16更新 | 214次组卷 | 4卷引用:上海市长宁区2022-2023学年高三上学期教学质量调研(一模)英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
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4 . Nobody expects a natural disaster to strike. Neither does anyone know the impact it can have on life. The following measures can save your life in an emergency.

Typhoon

Typhoons occur in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, particularly in exposed regions like the Caroline Islands, the Philippines, and Japan. The best place to hide during a typhoon is a secure basement or a bathroom with no windows. It is also a good idea to get under a solid piece of furniture to save yourself from a collapsing roof. A must-have device is a battery-powered weather radio, through which you will hear evacuation orders or in other cases, instructions on how to survive in your shelter and learn about the weather situation.

Flood

Floods occur more often than any other natural disaster and change the landscape dramatically. They are usually caused by intense rainfalls lasting for days. Don't try to be the bravest person around and stay in your house. Once you hear the evacuation warning, leave for safer higher grounds with your important papers in a waterproof container.

Avalanche

An avalanche can hit when you are enjoying Alpine skiing in a dreamlike location. It is very fast and disastrous, burying everything in its way under tons of snow. When an avalanche starts, try to move to the side of the slope as fast as you can. There will be more snow in the centre of the flow. To move faster, drop any heavy equipment you have on you. If you get buried in the snow, dig an air pocket to be able to keep breathing. Wait for the rescue team to find you and don't waste your energy shouting or digging frantically. Call out when you hear the team approaching.

Wildfire

Wildfires spread at an amazing speed and destroy everything in their way. If you are caught in a wild fire, use a wet cloth to cover your nose and mouth to ensure that you can breathe. Try to stay upwind of the fire at all times and get close to a pond or river. If there is no water nearby, move to a place which has already burned out and is less likely to spark again. Stay low and cover yourself with wet clothing, a blanket, or soil until the fire passes.

1. Among the four natural disasters, which one requires people to hide indoors?
A.TyphoonB.FloodC.AvalancheD.Wildfire
2. What should those trapped in typhoons probably do when they hear the evacuation orders?
A.get to a basement or windowless bathroom
B.find something solid to hide under
C.leave the place where they are
D.get a torch in case of a blackout
3. Which one of the following statements is TRUE according to the text?
A.Typhoons occur only in the exposed regions in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.
B.Floods cause the most frequent damage among the disasters mentioned.
C.Those who meet with avalanches are advised to call out the minute they’re trapped.
D.Getting clean air matters most in the case of wildfires, despite the difficulty.
2022-01-17更新 | 124次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市延安中学2021-2022学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
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