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阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是说明文。文章主要介绍大众希望通过回收塑料来解决塑料污染问题,但是实际回收率却很低,因为收益少。环境评论家认为,应该通过少用塑料制品或者可循环利用的物品来代替塑料制品来解决塑料污染问题。

1 . Since the 1950s, some 9.2 billion tonnes of plastic have been produced globally, of which only about 10% has ever been recycled. Yet environmentally conscious companies and consumers continue to look to recycling as a way to ease the plastic problem. Manufacturing giants claim to be committed to making more of their products and packaging from recycled materials. However, this confidence masks (掩饰) a complex web of issues around plastic recycling. Recycling rates remain extremely low and critics argue that we should look at alternative ways to tackle plastic pollution.

While many plastics have the potential to be recycled, most are not because the process is costly, complicated and the resulting product of a lower quality than the original. Despite rising demand for recycled plastic, few waste companies turn a profit. Part of this is because virgin plastic-linked to oil prices - is often cheaper than recycled plastic, meaning there is little economic incentive to use it. Worse yet, much of our plastic waste is difficult to recycle. Lightweight food packaging, like a mozzarella packet, contains different plastics, dyes and toxic additives (添加剂). This dirty mix means plastic recycled through mechanical methods- the most common form- can only be melted down and moulded (浇铸,塑造) again a couple of times before it becomes too fragile to be reused. And the nature of the process means plastic recycling has a carbon footprint of its own.

Given all of these difficulties, environmental critics say recycling is not the solution-and argue that creating more products from recycled material to attract environmental consciousness merely worsens the problem. “The solution is to use less plastic and to stop misleading the public about the recyclability,” says Enck, president of Beyond Plastics, a US campaign group with a mission to end single-use plastic. “They should stop making false claims about the recyclability of plastics since they know most will either be littered (乱扔) or burned or landfilled (填埋). Using less plastics means shifting to reusable products and relying more on paper, cardboard, glass and metal- -all of which should be made from recycled content.”

1. What is an environmentally conscious customer’s attitude towards recycling plastics?
A.Suspicious.B.Favorable.C.Indifferent.D.Disapproving.
2. What does the underlined word “incentive” in Paragraph 2 probably mean?
A.motive.B.issue.C.crisis.D.policy.
3. What is Paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.The recycling process of plastics.B.Pollutants contained in recycled plastics.
C.Reasons why users dislike recycled plastics.D.Contributing factors to low plastic recycling rates.
4. What will the environmental critics be happy to see according to the text?
A.Using metal or glass food containers.B.Littering recycled plastics in a landfill.
C.Processing plastics in a mechanical way.D.Launching campaigns to promote recyclability.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了格陵兰岛北部连续几天异常温暖的天气导致冰川快速融化,这种温暖令人担忧。

2 . Several days of unusual warm weather in northern Greenland have caused rapid melting(融化). “Temperatures have been running around -12.2 ℃-15.5 ℃. It is warmer than normal for this time of year,” scientists said. The amount of ice that melted in Greenland between July 15 and July 17 alone—6 billion tons of water per day—would be enough to fill 7.2 million Olympic-sized swimming pools, according to the report from the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Put another way, it was enough to cover the whole state of West Virginia with a foot of water.

For the scientists out on the ice sheet(冰盖), the warmth has been alarming. “It really makes me anxious,” said Kutalmis Saylam, a scientist who is now working in Greenland. “Yesterday, we could hang about in our T-shirts, which was not really expected. Since Greenland holds enough ice, sea level would rise by 7.5 meters around the world if ice all melted.”

In 2020, scientists found that Greenland’s ice sheet had melted beyond the point of no return. “No efforts to prevent global warming can stop it from finally breaking into small parts,” said researchers.

Aslak Grinsted, a climate scientist, said that they were trying to get flights into the camp so they can ship out the ice cores(冰芯) they had recently collected. But the warmth is destabilizing the landing site. “The weather we are seeing right now is too hot for the ski-equipped planes to land,” Grinsted said. “So we store the ice cores in large caves we have made into the snow to protect it from the heat of the summer.” Scientists made use of the abnormal warmth while they were waiting, playing volleyball in their shorts on an ice sheet at the top of the world.

Grinsted referred to the temperatures as a heat wave, and noted that the possibility of temperatures getting this hot was clearly connected to global warming.

1. How does the author support the topic of paragraph 1?
A.By exploring reasons.B.By making comparisons.
C.By designing the numbers.D.By doing some experiments.
2. What did Kutalmis mean in paragraph 2?
A.He disliked wearing a T-shirt.
B.He worried about the warmth.
C.He was deeply impressed by the ice.
D.He was thirsty for enjoying the sea view.
3. What does the underlined word “destabilizing“ mean in paragraph 4?
A.Quitting.B.Improving.C.Sheltering.D.Destroying.
4. What will the author probably do in the following paragraph?
A.Recommend visiting Greenland.
B.Describe how to ship out the ice core.
C.Call on people to protect the environment.
D.Plan to organize a sports meeting on ice.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了苏格兰的滨海湿地在人们的努力在恢复了自然状态,具体说明了人们是如何做到的以及这片沼泽的重要作用。

3 . In an area that’s surrounded by Scotland’s coal mining past and its industrial present, there’s a transformation happening beneath our feet. Just three years ago this area was re-engineered to bring the coastal wetland back to its natural state.

Allison Leonard, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, “We tear down the coastal defenses and let the water back in. But within a year or two we were seeing saltmarsh plants reappear. And we’re now three years down the line and you know, it’s all saltmarsh. And at that point we kind of just stepped back and let nature do its thing, and we’re really seeing the wildlife respond. So birds are using it at high tide and we see lots of deer, hares in the spring.”

As well as a diverse wetland habitat, this marsh has become a natural tool in our fight to reduce emissions of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere. Marshland plants absorb one of those key planet-warming gases, carbon dioxide, which then becomes buried in the mud. Lucy Miller, Research technician, University of St Andrews, said “This is some of the most organic-rich soils we find in the UK, compared to agricultural land, forest, forestry land. So we’ll wrap this up in cling film and then just to keep it, hold its shape and then we take it back to the University of St Andrews. We have a laboratory there. We will just perform a couple of experiments using a couple of different machines to measure the different layers, different levels of carbon within the layers of the core here.”

Allowing the sea to reclaim this stretch of land has provided a glimpse of how we can help nature to help us deal with the climate crisis.

1. What do the underlined words “a transformation” refer to?
A.The reappearance of saltmarsh.B.The recovery of the coastal wetland.
C.The bigger emissions of greenhouse gas.D.The fiercer climate crisis.
2. What can we infer from Paragraph 3?
A.Marshland plants take in harmful gases.B.Researchers have handled water pollution.
C.The air quality will be improved.D.The marsh makes a pollution-free environment.
3. Why will Lucy Miller take away some of the soils?
A.To measure levels of carbon in each layer.B.To get the data of different levels of soils.
C.To check the quality of different soils.D.To compare different soils.
4. What does the text mainly talk about?
A.The industrial transformation.B.The solution to the climate crisis.
C.The coastal wetland back to its natural state.D.The fight to reduce emissions of greenhouse gas.
2022-05-13更新 | 59次组卷 | 1卷引用:2022届贵州毕节市高三年级诊断性考试(三)英语试题
阅读理解-七选五(约150词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文,文章讲述了地震发生时应该怎么做。

4 . Earthquakes happen without warning (前兆). They can happen any time of a day, at any point during the year. But don’t worry because most are so weak that they cannot be felt.     1     However, it’s important to know what to do when an earthquake is happening.

    2     You could get injured from falling glass or parts of buildings. If you are outside, stay away from buildings and power lines (输电线).

Stay under a desk, table, or other strong furniture. Hold on to it. Or stay in a corner of the building. Cover your face and head with your arms and cover your mouth with a towel or clothing.     3    

Also keep away from a fire.     4    

If you are driving when an earthquake happens, stop the car if it’s safe. Stay inside your car until the earthquake stops, and don’t drive near bridges. Try not to stop by power lines or trees.

    5    

A.Do not go outside.
B.These could fall and hurt you.
C.Only a few big ones hurt people.
D.Every earthquake can cause disaster.
E.You could fall down and burn yourself on the fire.
F.Stay inside until shaking stops and it is safe to go outside.
G.Most people get injured by falling things in an earthquake, not by the shaking itself.
2022-03-13更新 | 257次组卷 | 2卷引用:贵州省威宁县2021-2022学年高一上学期素质教育期末测试英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
书面表达-开放性作文 | 适中(0.65) |
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5 . 假定你是李华,你校将在下周举行创建“绿色学校”的英语演讲比赛,请你写一篇英语演讲稿,内容包括:
1.创建目的;
2.创建方式;
3.号召创建。
注意:(1)词数100左右;
(2)可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen!
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
阅读理解-阅读单选(约400词) | 适中(0.65) |
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6 . It is reported that half the world’s forests have already been destroyed. This widespread destruction is due to deforestation (采伐森林). Deforestation is the removal of a forest or group of trees where the land is later transformed to a non-forest use. Cutting down trees is necessary for man’s survival. However, deforestation has a number of negative effects on the environment and needs to be controlled.

There are two main purposes for cutting down trees and one of them is to use the trees as resources. Essential items like paper, furniture and charcoal are all made from trees. Deforestation is also carried out to clear land for farming and to make room for roads and houses. As the population grows, more of the forest has to be cleared.

Although deforestation is necessary up to a point, it has some negative effects on the environment. Firstly, cutting down forests destroys animal habitats, leaving them with no place to live in. Deforestation also allows erosion to occur, which leaves the land easy to landslides and makes it difficult for plants to grow there. Finally, the removal of trees also worsens air pollution. Trees act as natural air filters that change carbon dioxide into oxygen. When they are removed, carbon dioxide can build up and pollute the atmosphere. Hence, it is obvious that deforestation harms the environment.

Due to the harm deforestation causes, it is necessary to control it. There are a number of ways to do this. One of them is to make better use of farming land. That means we do not need as much land for farming, and hence do not need to cut down so many trees. There must also be laws to limit deforestation and these laws must be enforced strictly. On top of that, reforestation must be carried out systematically. This method involves planting new trees and plants in areas where deforestation has occurred to replace what was destroyed.

To sum up, although deforestation must be carried out, it can harm the environment and must be controlled. Beyond a certain point, this damage to the environment cannot be fixed. Hence, we should do our best to make sure that the damage is never too great to fix.

1. What is the second paragraph mainly about?
A.How people get farmland.
B.What trees mean to human beings.
C.Why people carry out deforestation.
D.What effect deforestation has on environment.
2. What consequence may deforestation bring to animals according to the text?
A.Homelessness.B.Extinction.C.Disease.D.Wars.
3. According to the text, how can we control the harm of deforestation?
A.By replacing new trees.B.By banning deforestation.
C.By passing laws to limit farmland.D.By making the best of farmland.
4. What may be the worst result if deforestation is beyond control?
A.Carbon dioxide will pollute the atmosphere.
B.There will not be any forest left in the world.
C.The damage to the environment will be beyond repair.
D.People will have no trees as resources for essential items.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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7 . Catch your reusable bag and kiss your plastic bags goodbye. Plastic waste is on its way out, thanks to these governmental bans from around the world.

From Indiana to Maine, governments at all levels in the US are forcing bans and improving recycling. People are shopping smarter and companies are doing better to ensure the protection of our environment. Slowly but surely, the world is entering a brighter future as more and more countries follow. But there’s still a lot of work to be done—or undone.

Since the 1950s, researchers say that about more than 8.3 billion tons of plastic has been produced. And 60% of that waste has ended up in the environment. That number has increased quickly over the years. For example, it was recorded that the world’s plastic production doubled from 1976 (50 million tons) to 1989 (100 million tons). It was highest at 368 million in 2019 before decreasing to 367 million in 2020.

A million tons decrease of plastic production is not enough to deal with the rising pressures plastic puts into the environment. We still do not know how long it takes for plastic to breakdown. It means that about 12 million tons of plastic waste that entered the ocean in 2010 is still breaking into micro plastics and filling up the stomachs of birds and sea animals. The plastic going into our environment is not going away. While recent studies of plastic-eating enzymes and bacteria offer some hope for the future of plastic waste management, the best way to deal with our environmental stress is through decrease.

In 2020, New York City began to ban plastic bags. But this wasn’t the first plastic bag ban in a US state. In fact, the US wasn’t even the first country to introduce this idea. Back in 2002, Bangladesh became the first country to implement a plastic bag ban. Since then, other countries have followed, introducing their own ways to fight with the continuing plastic bags.

1. What do we know about plastic waste?
A.We have completely cleaned it upB.It is hardly increasing all over the world.
C.We have done nothing to deal with it.D.There is a long way to solve the problem of it.
2. How much plastic waste has been put into the environment since the 1950s?
A.More than 8.3 billion tons.B.About 5 billion tons.
C.About 100 million tons.D.Less than 368 million tons.
3. What can be inferred about dealing with plastic?
A.It doesn’t take long to breakdown itB.Sea animals can be eating most of it.
C.Some enzymes and bacteria help a lot.D.Cutting plastic waste down is still the best way.
4. What does the underlined word “implement” in the last paragraph mean?
A.Carry out.B.Keep up.C.Look at.D.Take away.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |

8 . Pumpkins (南瓜) have all shapes and sizes and have colors of golden orange, white and green. Cooked in a pie, they are symbols of autumn that are grown in every county of Washington.

U.S. farmers grow more than a billion pounds of pumpkins every year, and many famers use sheets (膜) of plastic blocking the grass and preventing water loss to make their plants grow well. In the country, farmers use about a billion pounds of plastic every year. Unfortunately, that plastic is thrown away finally, and in some areas, burned in the fields.

For several years, Carol Miles has studied a new product—the soil-biodegradable (土壤生物降解的) plastic cover that can be left in the ground after harvest, then broken down by things in the soil. “You don't need to pull it out of the field and throw it away every autumn, saving time and money,” Miles said.

Most pumpkins grow along vines (藤蔓) that spread through the grass-blocking cover, and Miles wanted to see how pumpkin fruit performed over the plastic cover. That brought a challenge: the soil-biodegradable cover stuck to the bottom of the fruit.

“We have a lot of dew (露水) in the morning, and we found that if we let the fruit dry after harvest, the cover would stick more strongly to the pumpkins,” Miles said. “Nobody wants plastic stuck to pumpkins, even if it's biodegradable. But if you wipe the fruit before the dew dries, the plastic comes right off.”

Farmers who grow plants that don't set fruit on plastic covers won't meet this challenge. For those who do, it means an extra step that they'll have to weigh against advantages and disadvantages for the development.

“Challenges aside, working with this crop can bring on a happy picture,” the farmer Tymon said. “Pumpkins are great. They have bright colors, and are really fun to work with.”

1. How did farmers deal with the sheets of plastic in old farming method?
A.They collected them and recycled them.
B.They burned them or threw them away.
C.They covered them under the ground.
D.They broke down them and buried them in the soil.
2. What's the advantage of Mile's new product?
A.It prevents water loss.
B.It blocks the grass.
C.It is stuck to pumpkins easily.
D.It's environment-friendly.
3. How can farmers do to prevent the plastic sticking to pumpkins?
A.Let the pumpkins break down plastic sheets.
B.Wipe the dew from the plastic cover.
C.Clean the pumpkins when they're wet.
D.Put some powder on the plastic sheets.
4. What does the underlined words “weigh against” means?
A.Balance against.B.Fight against.
C.Remove.D.Measure.
2021-07-20更新 | 31次组卷 | 1卷引用:贵州省威宁县2020-2021学年高一下学期期末英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 适中(0.65) |
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9 . To address the plastic pollution troubling the world’s seas and waterways, Cornell University chemists have developed a new polymer (聚合物) that can degrade (降解) plastic when exposed to ultraviolet radiation, according to the research published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

“We have created a new plastic that has the mechanical properties required by commercial fishing gear. If it eventually gets lost in the water environment, this material can degrade on a realistic time scale,” said lead researcher Bryce Lipinski, professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Cornell University. “This material could effectively reduce persistent plastic accumulation in the environment.”

Commercial fishing contributes to about half of all floating plastic waste that ends up in the oceans. Fishing nets and ropes are primarily made from three kinds of polymers, none of which easily degrade. “While research of degradable plastics has received much attention in recent years,” Lipinski said, “obtaining a material with a mechanical strength comparable to commercial plastic remains a difficult challenge.”

Coates and his research team have spent the past 15 years developing the new plastic called isotactic polypropylene oxide, or iPPO. While its original discovery was in 1949, the mechanical strength of this material was unknown before this recent work. The high isotacticity and polymer chain length of their material makes it different from previous plastics and provides its mechanical strength.

Lipinski and other scientists want no race of the polymer to be left in the environment. He notes there is precedent (先例) for the biodegradation of small chains of iPPO which could effectively make it disappear and ongoing efforts aim to prove this.

1. What is the feature about the new polymer?
A.It can solve the problem of plastic consumption.
B.It can degrade plastic waste in the sea water.
C.It has been developed to solve plastic pollution.
D.It has been developed to lower fishing costs.
2. What can we infer from paragraph 3?
A.It requires great effort to invent the new plastic.
B.Fishing should be forbidden in the sea.
C.Fishing nets and ropes are not the major pollution source.
D.Degradable plastics were not paid attention to until recent years.
3. What did the recent study find about iPPO?
A.Its original discovery.B.Its mechanical properties.
C.Its complex structure.D.Its mechanical strength.
4. What is Lipinski’s attitude towards the future of iPPO?
A.Doubtful.B.Promising.
C.Unconcerned.D.Disapproval.

10 . Running after fireflies (萤火虫)on a warm summer night might become a rare childhood memory if humans don't take action. There are over 2,000 different firefly species around the world, but their populations are decreasing due to artificial light pollution, pesticides (杀虫剂)and smaller habitat size.

A team of Tufts University-led researchers surveyed scientists and conservationists about the threats to firefly populations around the world. According to the study, one of the main threats to fireflies in East Asia and South America is artificial light. Fireflies light up to attract mates, but they can easily mistake human-made lights as potential partners. Adult fireflies typically live only a few days, which doesn't give them long to find a mate.

Humans' destroying the insects' natural habitats creates another threat. During their larval phase (幼虫期),Malaysian fireflies live in riverside bushes that are often pulled out for human-made fish farms. In Europe, Lampyris fireflies are finding less food to eat due to the growing urbanization of what were once woods and farmlands. In Malaysia, adult pteroptyx fireflies that usually prefer to mate in specific trees next to rivers have to find new mating areas because the trees are being knocked down for farmhouses.

The study also looked at the effects of climate change, tourism, invasive (侵入的)species and water pollution. On a positive note, while fireflies around the world seem to be suffering from the previously mentioned issues, Big Dipper fireflies living in the US happen to be booming. "Those guys can survive pretty much anywhere,said Sara Lewis, a biologist from Tufts University.

The study urges countries where firefly populations are dwindling to take measures to preserve suitable habitats, lessen light pollution, reduce use of pesticides and develop better guidelines for tourism around known firefly areas.

1. What mainly causes the drop of the firefly population in East Asia?
A.Light pollution.B.Habitat loss.
C.Climate change.D.Food shortage.
2. Which of the following is more likely to adapt to the environment?
A.The Malaysian firefly.B.The Lampyris firefly.
C.The Pteroptyx firefly.D.The Big Dipper firefly.
3. What does the underlined word “dwindling” in paragraph 5 mean?
A.on the riseB.on the decrease
C.under controlD.out of control
4. What does the text mainly talk about?
A.Watching fireflies is a rare childhood memory.
B.Cooperation is the key to firefly protection.
C.Urbanization becomes a main threat to fireflies.
D.Human activities lead to less firefly population.
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