1. Who does the speaker probably speak to?
A.Students. | B.Teachers. | C.Parents. |
A.Paper bags. | B.Plastic bags. | C.Reusable bags. |
A.Unplugging the devices. |
B.Using energy-saving devices. |
C.Standing beside the devices. |
A.To call for people to take action. |
B.To correct some wrong ideas. |
C.To discuss different habits in life. |
If you go out to the fields at night in spring or summer, you can hear frogs singing
The frog is a good and useful creature that benefits human beings. They can catch fast-moving
But now frogs
The cause that is responsible
Something must be done as soon as possible
3 . The city of Venice, Italy, has finally made a long-awaited decision. Starting on August 1, 2021, cruise ships (游轮) will no longer be allowed to enter the city’s waters.
Contrary to popular opinion, these cruise ship visitors contribute relatively little to the local tourism economy. The New York Times reported cruise ship passengers add up to 73% of visitors, but contribute a mere 18% of tourism dollars. The percentage is inverted for people who spend at least one night at a hotel; they represent 14% of visitors, but 48% of the business.
Many people are overjoyed by the news, especially environmental activists. Firstly, the cruise ships would disturb the waterways and erode (侵蚀) the foundations of already weak buildings. A 2019 study published in Nature found the waves created by large ships could “redistribute industrial pollutants already present in the waters.” Others have said these same waves made huge holes in the underwater bottoms of buildings, making them unstable. Furthermore, when canals are deepened in order to allow larger boats, it destroys coastal habitats and makes floods worse. This is part of the reason why, in recent years, Venice has experienced terrible flooding that completely flooded St. Mark’s Square and other landmarks.
The announcement came as a surprise as many did not expect the regional government to act so quickly. In April a similar ban was issued, but it depended on finding an alternative port for the ships—a requirement that local people complained could take years to achieve. The announcement made last week, however, did away with that condition, allowing the city to move forward quickly with the ban.
1. What does the underlined word “inverted” mean in Paragraph 2?A.Increased slightly. | B.Looked down upon. | C.Adjusted accordingly. | D.Turned upside down. |
A.Reasons for Venice’s terrible floods. | B.Dangers cruise ships brought about. |
C.Reaction to the long-awaited decision. | D.Damage waves did to buildings. |
A.Unclear. | B.Hopeful. | C.Doubtful. | D.Objective. |
A.Venice Says “No” to Cruise Ships. | B.The Long-awaited Decision to be Made. |
C.Cruise Ships Erodes Ancient Venice. | D.Venice Tries to Protect Its Waterway. |
4 . Traditionally, profiting from forests often meant capitalizing on timber (木材) —choosing commercial timber. Yet increasingly, there is an understanding that it’s of greater significance to keep trees standing than cut them down for financial profit. Money is not everything. We have to recognize real and lasting value is from natural resources. But money is a fact of life.
Good news is that we can expect entire natural woodland is left undamaged and still provides a revenue (收益) stream. Leaving woodland complete does not necessarily mean that we do not touch it at all. Conservation work may involve building back biodiversity or the removal of foreign plant species.
A healthy woodland system can provide a range of yields (产物). Besides eatable yields—top fruit, berries, and food crops, it produces substances for chemical use. The non-timber forest products provided by natural ecosystems vary significantly depending on where they are. But there are always more ways to explore to acquire revenue.
A project in the UK, for example, shows woodland itself is also a draw for visitors. It engages a community who creates a sustainable area of woodland. The community largely obtains revenue by opening up parts of the natural woodland to the public with an adventure playground and outdoor recreational activities on the site. It also offers courses on nest building, special wildlife events and more. The project is thought to have great uniqueness. It centers round the existing natural land; the yields that woodland provides become by products.
Recreational activities, tours, and classes are just the commencement. A rich and bio-diverse woodland can be an ecosystem that draws in more people looking for a beautiful place to stay. Woodland has great value in ecological and social terms. And when you nurse it, it could also add to the income from your land.
1. What do people increasingly think about forest conservation?A.It means making full use of timber. | B.It outweighs financial benefit. |
C.It is extremely difficult to carry out. | D.It is all about rebuilding biodiversity. |
A.It provides lots of recreational activities. | B.It highlights educational experiences. |
C.It makes woodland itself the main product. | D.It focuses on nursing the natural land. |
A.Intention. | B.Beginning. | C.Wish. | D.Exception. |
A.Forest conservation has been a top priority. |
B.A project helps create sustainable woodland. |
C.Non-timber products help gain more benefit. |
D.Woodland brings profit while staying complete. |
5 . While it throws out about 90 pounds of food per person every year, Japan doesn’t rank at the top of the world’s list of wasteful nations. Still, what’s thrown away represents a serious problem for an island nation with limited landfill space and a goal of greater sustainability. Reinvention can offer an alternative. A Japanese company is taking vegetable peels, cooking oil and other used foodstuffs and making entirely different products.
Concrete is the most widely used construction material in the world, and its key element, cement, is a major polluter of greenhouse emissions. So what if a more sustainable alterative were possible by making cement with food waste, which also would help reduce greenhouse emissions from landfills where that waste would otherwise be thrown away? That’s the idea behind Fabula, a Tokyo-based start-up.
Researchers at Fabula created a recipe to make food concrete by drying leftovers and pressing them into a mold (模具) at a high temperature. The company, founded by researchers at the University of Tokyo, began with items commonly thrown away like cabbage and orange peels but found that almost any food item can be used. It now takes mostly coffee grounds and tea leaves to make its cement. The product’s durability depends on the components.
Fabula is currently producing made-to-order household items, such as coasters and dishes, while awaiting its patent. The goal is to make furniture and larger structures once the technology is able to make the cement more durable. Food production companies that can’t avoid generating waste during their processes have reached out to work with the company. “We hope to become a matching service between companies that have food waste and companies who want to build things out of such materials,” said Takuma Oishi, Fabula’s chief commercial officer.
Since the cement is 100 percent eatable, it could create opportunities during disaster response when temporary structures need to be built quickly. The people inside might even turn to them for food. If the technology advances enough, Oishi suggested, someday we may be able “to eat the homes or furniture when necessary”.
1. Which problem Japan faces is mentioned in paragraph 1?A.Food waste. |
B.Garbage littering. |
C.Energy crisis. |
D.Environmental pollution. |
A.Using food remains in recipes. |
B.Finding a cheaper alternative to landfills. |
C.Making a novel building material from leftovers. |
D.Cutting greenhouse gases by recycling home devices. |
A.The diversity of food sources. |
B.The prospects of the company. |
C.The innovation of a traditional cuisine. |
D.The process of developing food concrete. |
A.It can fill stomachs. |
B.It’s solid and lasting. |
C.It can prevent disasters. |
D.It’s delicate but cost-free. |
6 . Natalie and Callie, both 13 years old, started raising monarch butterflies for fun in 2020.
But after realizing the monarchs were an endangered species, their
They learned that the population of monarch butterflies had
So the girls teamed up with a national nonprofit group to plant a native garden
The team has won the Silver Award for their
A.dream | B.hobby | C.career | D.decision |
A.doubled | B.aged | C.declined | D.exploded |
A.management | B.assessment | C.selection | D.destruction |
A.relied on | B.kept off | C.broke down | D.gave away |
A.partly | B.secretly | C.rarely | D.specially |
A.attracted | B.protected | C.monitored | D.trapped |
A.employ | B.educate | C.force | D.limit |
A.meant | B.cost | C.changed | D.hurt |
A.dry | B.medical | C.healthy | D.wild |
A.pleasing | B.light | C.long | D.disappointing |
A.project | B.concept | C.schedule | D.assignment |
A.concerned | B.connected | C.finished | D.occupied |
A.chemicals | B.time | C.funds | D.energy |
A.quoted | B.continued | C.replied | D.commented |
A.donations | B.support | C.patience | D.efforts |
7 . A method to transform a commonly thrown-away plastic to a resin (树脂) used in 3D printing could allow for making better use of plastic waste. A team of Washington State University researchers developed a simple and efficient way to transform polylactic acid (PLA)(聚乳酸), a bio-based plastic used in products such as filament, plastic silverware and food packaging to a high-quality resin.
“We found a way to immediately turn this into something that’s stronger and better, and we hope that will provide people the inspiration to upcycle this stuff instead of just throw it away,” said Yu-Chung Chang, a postdoctoral researcher in the WSU School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering and a co-corresponding author on the work. “We made stronger materials just straight out of trash. We believe this could be a great opportunity.”
Although it’s bio-based, PLA, which is categorized as a number 7 plastic, doesn’t break down easily. It can float in fresh or salt water for a year without degrading (降解). It is also rarely recycled because like many plastics, when it’s melted down and re-formed, it doesn’t perform as well as the original version and becomes less valuable.
“It’s biodegradable and compostable, but once you look into it, it turns out that it can take up to 100 years for it to rot away in a landfill,” Chang said. “In reality, it still creates a lot of pollution. We want to make sure that when we do start producing PLA on the milliontons scale, we will know how to deal with it.”
While the researchers focused on PLA for the study, they hope to apply the work to poly-ethylene terephthalate (PET) (涤纶树脂), which is more common than PLA and has a similar chemical structure and presents a bigger waste problem. They have filed a temporary patent and are working to further optimize (优化) the process. The researchers are also looking into other applications for the upcycling method.
1. What can the method help do according to paragraph 1?A.Solve financial crisis. | B.Change waste into wealth. |
C.Control plastic production. | D.Determine 3D printing skills. |
A.Promising. | B.Unrealistic. | C.Imaginable. | D.Reliable. |
A.Invaluable to recycle. | B.Easy to deal with. |
C.Hard to break down. | D.Difficult to sort out. |
A.Applications for an upcylcing method. |
B.A better method to break down plastic. |
C.3D printing with newly found materials. |
D.A new way to turn plastic into valuable products. |
(1)乱停放自行车造成的不良影响;
(2)发出倡议。
注意:
(1)写作词数应为80左右;
(2)请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
参考词汇:random随意的
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9 . When most of us think of sand, we immediately think of sunny beaches and summer holidays. But actually it’s in pretty much everything that surrounds us in our everyday lives, from the walls of our homes to the glass bottles in out kitchens and even the mobile phones in our hands. Sand is the second most used resource in the world after water: it accounts for more than two-thirds of everything that’s being dug out of the ground. But there isn’t a limitless supply. In fact, a UN report says we might be running out.
According to the report, we use an estimated 15 billion tons of sand every year in the construction industry alone. That’s enough to build a 20m×20m wall around the equator (赤道) every year. However, sand can take tens of thousands of years to form (形成): the process starts with rock being eroded (侵蚀) in the mountains and ends, eventually, with sand being in river beds, on beaches and on the seafloor.
Sand is heavy and difficult to transport, so in developing countries, sand is often mined from the nearest convenient source, and quite often that means a river bed or beach. But beaches and rivers are delicately balanced ecosystems and when a large amount of sand is removed, the balance is upset. The smallest fish, which eat organic matter on the sand in river beds, form the base of the food chain in a river. If this sand is removed, so is the source of food for the bottom feeders. All organisms in a food chain share the joys and the sorrows. Thus, when they disappear, so does the food for the larger fish which would have been caught and eaten, or sold by fishermen.
It is high time we took into consideration the big problem concerning the tiny thing. More and more conservationists are calling for new choices to replace sand, especially in the construction industry.
1. Why are the things in our daily life mentioned in the beginning?A.To show the uses of sand. | B.To show our relationship with nature. |
C.To introduce our lifestyles. | D.To stress the convenience of modern life. |
A.Sand is actually our most used natural resource. |
B.Sand is used more quickly than it’s formed. |
C.The construction industry doesn’t use sand wisely. |
D.The problem of wasting sand is worsening. |
A.The river beds. | B.The fishermen. |
C.The larger fish. | D.The smallest fish. |
A.The World Is Running Out of Sand |
B.Alternatives to Sand Will Be Found Soon |
C.Sand Mining Is Unfriendly to Nature |
D.Sand Is in Need of Immediate Preservation |
10 . Soot (煤灰) pollution is speeding up climate-driven melting in Antarctica, a new study suggests, raising questions about how to protect the delicate continent from the increasing number of humans who want to visit.
“It really makes us question, is our presence really needed?” says Alia Khan, one of the authors of the new study. “We have quite a large black carbon footprint in Antarctica, which is enhancing snow and ice melt.”
Black carbon is the leftover thing from burning plants or fossil fuels. Soot in Antarctica comes primarily from waste gases of cruise ships (游轮), vehicles, airplanes and electrical generators, although some pollution travels on the wind from other parts of the globe. The dark particles (微粒) coat white snow and absorb heat from the sun the way a black T-shirt does on a warm day. The blanket of dark bits speeds up melting that was already happening more quickly because of global warming. When snow and ice are uncovered, they reflect an enormous amount of sunlight before it can turn into heat.
“These are the mirrors on our planet,” says Sonia Nagorski, a scientist at the University of Alaska Southeast. “When those mirrors are covered in a film of dark bits, they are less reflective. That means more heat is trapped on Earth, speeding up melting and contributing to global warming.”
As a scientist who personally visits Antarctica every year, Khan says she is troubled by her own research results. On the one hand, she goes to Antarctica to collect crucial data about how quickly the snow and ice there are disappearing. “But then when we come to conclusions like this it really does make us think twice about how frequently we need to visit the continent,” she says, “and what kind of regulations should be placed on tourism as well.” That could mean requiring that cruise ships and vehicles be electric, for example, or limiting the number of visitors each year.
1. What are the feelings expressed in Khan’s words in paragraph 2?A.Doubt and concern. |
B.Confidence and courage. |
C.Anger and disappointment. |
D.Optimism and certainty. |
A.Burnt plants. |
B.Tourist vehicles. |
C.Black carbon elsewhere. |
D.Fossil fuels underneath Antarctica. |
A.It causes Antarctic surface temperature to rise. |
B.It is increasing in amount because of wind. |
C.It reflects a large volume of sunlight. |
D.It is like a big mirror on Earth. |
A.Help design scientific research regulations. |
B.Use electric cars for her daily transportation. |
C.Collect more data about Antarctica. |
D.Reduce her visits to Antarctica. |