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阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇科学报道。文章主要探讨了早期人类是否可能通过类似冬眠的状态来度过严冬的假设,并基于化石研究和专家论文提出了这一观点。文章还涉及了哺乳动物冬眠的生理机制,以及早期人类可能如何适应严酷环境等科学内容。

1 . While many of us might long to just sleep through this entire winter, humans, unlike a lot of other mammals - don’t have the capacity to hibernate (冬眠). But researchers think they have found some tell-tale marks on the fossils, which suggests that early humans may have survived the harsh winter by hibernating.

Bears have specialized metabolic (新陈代谢的) processes to protect them from this extended sleep, but sometimes this process doesn’t quite go to plan. For example, hibernators can end up with a host of diseases after hibernation if they don’t get enough food reserves before they go down for the winter. The researchers believe this may have been the circumstance of some human ancestors whose remains with deep cracks in bones were discovered in a Spanish cave called Sima de los Huesos. This deep hole is home to an incredible number of fossils, with archaeologists having discovered thousands of early humans’ skeletal remains that are around 430,000 years old and probably the ancestors of the Sima people or others.

In a paper published in L’Anthropologie, two experts argue that the fossils found in Sima de los Huesos show seasonal variations that suggest that bone growth got interrupted for several months of each year. They suggest these early humans found themselves being in metabolic states that helped them to survive for long periods of time in extremely cold conditions with limited stores of body fat.

The researchers admit the idea “may sound like science fiction”, but they point out that many mammals including primates (灵长类动物) do this. “This suggests that the genetic basis and physiology for such slow metabolism could be preserved in many mammalian species including humans," state Arsuaga and Bartsiokas.

However, Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum in London pointed out that large mammals such as bears do not actually hibernate, because their large bodies cannot lower their core temperature enough. Instead, they enter a less deep sleep known as torpor. In such a condition, the energy demands of the human-sized brains of the Sima people would have remained very large, creating an additional survival problem for them during torpor.

1. Why does the author mention the example in Paragraph 2?
A.To explain the special ability of bears.B.To provide the background to the research.
C.To show the basis of researchers’ evaluation.D.To discuss a new cause of hibernating disease.
2. What can we know about the bones found in the Spanish cave?
A.They were badly preserved with deep cracks.
B.Their growth discontinued temporarily for some reason.
C.Their appearances varied from individual to individual.
D.They showed signs of people living in comfort in the past.
3. What is Arsuaga and Bartsiokas’ attitude towards humans’ hibernation?
A.It’s quite possible.B.It merely appears in science fiction.
C.It’s an exception to human genetics.D.It solved the mystery of humans’ evolution in Europe.
4. What might the hibernation of the Sima people result in according to Chris?
A.They might have developed smaller brains.
B.Their daily sleep quality might become poor.
C.Their body temperature might increase rapidly.
D.They might suffer from life-threatening starvation.
2024-05-21更新 | 74次组卷 | 2卷引用:2024届江西省南昌市第十九中学高三下学期第二次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇应用文。文章介绍了三个考古新发现。

2 . Every day people joined archaeologists and artists in finding some of the year’s most dramatic discoveries. Below are some examples of 2023.

Naughty pupils-ancient punishment method resurfaces

Archaeologists discovered 18,000 ink-carved pieces of pottery-known as “ostraca”—at the site of Athribis early this year, and among them were hundreds of fragments(碎片)with a single symbol repeated front and back.

Those scribbles(潦草的文字)are evidence of ‘naughty “pupils” being made to write lines, according to researchers a Germany’s University of Tuebingen. The fragments also included receipts, school texts, trade information and lists of names.

Van Gogh peers out in hidden portrait

There is one more known van Gogh’s self-portrait in the world, and it was hidden behind a painting of a peasant woman. People made the discovery when they took an X-ray of one of his portraits from 1885 and discovered the artist’s own image behind layers of cardboard and glue. While X-rays often reveal how artists-changed their compositions, the full self-portrait of van Gogh came as a huge surprise, who was known to reuse canvase(画布)to save money.

Another treasure collection from Sanxingdui

The Sanxingdui archaeological site has produced thousands of relics. The latest discovery, reported by Chinese state media in June includes 3,155 objects, a turtle shell-shaped box and a sacrificial altar among them. A team has been digging six places of the site, turning up more than 13,000 objects so far. Last year, the relics they uncovered included a golden mask, ivory artifacts(手工艺品)and a jade knife. The Sanxingdui culture still remains mysterious, as it left behind no written records or human remains, though many believe it to be part of the ancient kingdom of Shu, which ruled along the upper stream of the Yangtze River until it was conquered in 316 BC.

1. What led to the researchers’ conclusion about the fragments?
A.The repeated symbol.B.Trade information.
C.Lists of pupils’ names.D.The mark of ink.
2. Why did van Gogh hide his self-portrait in a painting?
A.To keep away from X-rays.
B.To save money.
C.To make his works more mysterious.
D.To help people find his composition.
3. Which is the newly-unearthed relic of 2023 in Sanxingdui site?
A.A jade knife.B.A golden mask.
C.A written record.D.A turtle shell-shaped box.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约280词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了雨伞的用途和历史。

3 . To us it seems so natural to put up an umbrella to keep the water off when it rains, but actually the umbrella was not invented as protection against the rain. Its first use was as a shade against the sun! Nobody knows who first invented it, but the umbrella was used in very ancient times. Probably the first to use it were the Chinese.

We know that the umbrella was used in ancient Egypt and Babylon as a sunshade. And there was a strange thing connected with its use: it became a symbol of honour. In the Far East in ancient times, the umbrella was allowed to be used only by those in high office.

In Europe, the Greeks were the first to use the umbrella as a sunshade. And the umbrella was commonly used in ancient Greece. But it is believed that the first persons in Europe to use the umbrella as protection against the rain were the ancient Romans.

During the Middle Ages, the use of the umbrella practically disappeared. Then it appeared again in Italy in the late sixteenth century. And again it was considered as a symbol of power. By 1680, the umbrella appeared in France and later in England.

By the eighteenth century, the umbrella was used against rain throughout most of Europe. Umbrellas did not change much in style during all this time, though they became much lighter in weight. It wasn’t until the twentieth century that women’s umbrellas began to be made in a whole variety of colours.

1. According to this passage, the umbrella was probably first used in ancient________.
A.ChinaB.EgyptC.GreeceD.Rome
2. In Europe, the umbrella was first used against the rain________.
A.during the Middle Ages
B.by the eighteenth century
C.in ancient Rome
D.in ancient Greece
3. This passage mainly talks about________.
A.when and how the umbrella was invented
B.why the umbrella was so popular in Europe
C.the development of the umbrella
D.the history and use of the umbrella
阅读理解-阅读单选(约450词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章讲述了古生物学远不止是新的化石发现,通过化石上表征的过去,古生物学家抽丝剥茧得出过去经验,预测危险,为未来如何避免犯过去同样的错误提供明灯,强调了古生物学研究的真正意义何在。

4 . Frozen in time, a 125-million-year-old mammal attacking a dinosaur. A 39-million-year-old whale, the heaviest animal that ever lived. The oldest known jellyfish, from 505 million years ago. Paleontology (古生物学) produces newsworthy discoveries.

Fossils (化石), moreover, provide direct evidence for the long history of life, allowing paleontologists to test hypotheses (假设) about evolution with data only they provide. They allow investigation of present and past life on Earth. Flows of biological diversity, appearances of new life forms and the extinctions of long existing ones, would go undiscovered without these efforts. But the headlines over exciting new fossils greatly underestimate the true importance of paleontology. Its real significance lies in how such discoveries brighten the grand history of life on Earth. From its beginnings, more than three billion years ago, to the present day, fossils record how life adapted or disappeared in the face of major environmental challenges.

Paleontologists provide us with a unique vantage on modern climate change. They play an essential role in interpreting ancient environments, in reconstructing ancient oceans, continents and climates. Fossils provide key limitation on the climate models that are essential for predicting future climate change. And the fossil record gives important insights into how life will respond to predicted future climate conditions, because these have occurred before in Earth’s history.

In addition, paleontology has provided a fundamental contribution to human thought: the reality of species extinction and thus of a world that has dramatically changed over time. In documenting the history of life, paleontologists recognized that many extinction episodes could occur suddenly, such as the event 66 million years ago that ended the dinosaurs. The search for the causes of past mass extinctions started pioneering studies from across the scientific spectrum (科学界), focusing on potential future threats to humanity.

Not only do paleontologists know what happens to life when things go bad, they also know how long it takes for ecosystems and biodiversity to recover from these disasters, which can take far longer than modern humans have existed.

Paleontologists thus provide a unique perspective on the nature and future long-term ecological impact of the current human-produced biodiversity crisis, the so-called Sixth Extinction, and therefore the importance of protecting modern biodiversity. The very concept of a Sixth Extinction would not exist without paleontologists documenting the first five.

Paleontologists know that understanding life’s past is critical to anticipating and adapting to life’s and humanity’s future. Paleontology is important because it brings its unique and critical perspective to current challenges in climate change, biodiversity loss and the environment. Paleontologists can predict the future because they know the past.

1. The first two paragraphs are written to _______.
A.describe an eventB.raise a question
C.present an opinionD.make a comparison
2. What does the underlined word “vantage” in Paragraph 3 mean?
A.A positive effect.B.A valuable suggestion.
C.A quick decision.D.A comprehensive view.
3. Which of the following would the author agree with?
A.Ecological recovery takes shorter than imagined.
B.Past lessons can help to predict the future threats.
C.Paleontologists can handle the biodiversity crisis.
D.Fossil studies focus on the causes of mass extinctions.
4. What’s the best title for the passage?
A.Paleontology: A Pioneering Study
B.Paleontology: A History Recorder
C.Paleontology Tells More About Nature Than Humans
D.Paleontology Is Far More Than New Fossil Discoveries
2024-01-21更新 | 239次组卷 | 6卷引用:江西省广丰中学2023-2024学年高一上学期期末考试英语试题(含听力)
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-七选五(约270词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了丝绸的发展史和对历史的影响。
5 . Who Invented Silk?

Silk is a thin, yet extremely strong, fiber. It is made from protein that silkworms produce when they make their cocoons. Thousands of years ago, ancient Chinese craftsmen began weaving silk fiber into a soft, smooth fabric. A precious textile, silk was at first reserved for exclusive use by the Chinese imperial court. Chinese officials decided that silk-making methods must remain China’s secret.     1    


The Silky Secret Gets Out

However, the existence of silk did not remain a secret. On diplomatic visits to neighboring rulers, Chinese envoys carried gifts of silk. By the first century BC, the Romans had become familiar with this exotic(异国情调的)luxury item.     2     Western rulers issued edicts (法令)that controlled silk prices. As in China, silk was designated a solely royal fabric. Trading for silk was principal motivation for merchants who searched for routes.


From Europe to the Far East

Over the centuries, different main routes developed.     3     Tradesmen travelling east or west could choose among routes that crossed many regions of Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, and the Far East.     4     Trading vessels carried goods from China and Southeast Asia across Indian Ocean to Africa, India, and the Near East. Sea routes even reached Venice, Italy, by crossing the Mediterranean.

    5    

The Silk Road played an important role in bringing diverse cultures and peoples into contact. To make successful deals, merchants had to learn the languages and customs of the countries they crossed. As they journeyed along the Silk Road, people shared knowledge about arts, crafts, literature, science, and technologies. Over hundreds of years, cultures, languages, and religions influenced one another. Perhaps Chinese silk influenced history more extensively than any single famous person you can name.

A.How Silk Changed History
B.How Silk Brought People Together
C.It soon grew wildly popular in the West.
D.In addition, sailors discovered sea routes.
E.Rulers ordered that anyone who revealed these methods to foreigners would be put to death.
F.Later they came to be known as “The Silk Road”, but the word “Road” should have been plural.
G.But, there were many roads, not just one. A German geologist named the trade routes “The Silk Road”.
2023·全国·模拟预测
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍一项对埃及古墓食物罐的研究,研究表明,对气味的探索可以丰富我们对过去的理解。

6 . More than 3,400 years after two ancient Egyptians were laid to rest, the jars of food left still smell sweet. A team of analytical chemists and archaeologists (考古学家) has analysed these smells to help identify the jars’ contents. The study shows how the exploration of smell can enrich our understanding of the past.

The 1906 discovery of the undisturbed tomb (墓穴) of Kha and Merit symbolized an important stage in Egyptology. The tomb remains the most complete non-royal ancient one ever found in Egypt, showing important information about how high-ranking individuals were treated after death.

Unusually for the time, the archaeologist who discovered the tomb resisted the temptation to open the sealed containers even after they were sent to the Egyptian Museum. The contents of many of these containers are still unknown, although there are some clues, says analytical chemist Ilaria Degano. “From taking with the museum keeper we knew there were some fruity smells in the display cases,” she says.

Degano and her colleagues placed various artefacts (人工制品) inside plastic bags for several days to collect some of the chemical substances they released. Then the team used a special machine to identify the components of the smells from each artefact. They found some chemicals associated with dried fish, and some chemicals common in fruits. The findings will feed into a larger project to reanalyse the tomb’s contents and produce a more comprehensive picture of burial customs for non-royals that existed when Kha and Merit died, about 70 years before Tutankhamun became the Egyptian ruler.

Aside from showing more about past civilizations, ancient smells could make museum visits more inviting. Usually, people admire exhibits with their eyes in museums. “Smell is a relatively unexplored gateway to the collective past for museum visitors,” says Cecilia Bembibre at University College London. “It has the potent alto allow us to experience the in a more emotional, personal way, through our nose.”

1. What can we describe the 1906 discovery of Kha and Merit’ tomb as?
A.A landmark in Egyptology.B.A turning point in human history.
C.A breakthrough in archaeology.D.A mirror of ancient non-royal life.
2. What does the underlined word “temptation” mean in paragraph 3?
A.Pressure.B.Ambition.C.Desire.D.Tendency.
3. Degano and her colleagues placed things inside plastic bags to         .
A.protect them from harmB.gather their smells
C.test the special machineD.back up a larger project
4. What can the ancient smells do for museum visitors according to Bembibre?
A.They bring them back to the past.
B.They give them emotional support.
C.They change their view on civilizations.
D.They add to their experience.
22-23高三上·浙江杭州·阶段练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要说明了中国科学家发现的下颚化石有助于帮助我们更好的理解人类从鱼类进化而来的历史。

7 . Humans evolved from apes. This is what we learned in biology class. But what came before apes? Chinese scientists have discovered fossils that could enrich the evolutionary story of how humans evolved from fish.

According to four articles published in the journal Nature in late September, Chinese researchers found fish fossils that provide the “missing link” about the origin of the jaw, a key feature that 99.8 percent of vertebrate (脊椎动物) species have.

Zhu Min, a lead researcher of the studies from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said that the findings drew a large amount of interest in the science world due to the importance of jaws in animal evolution.

However, the rise of the jaw had been a mystery due to a lack of sufficient fossil evidence to support that jawed vertebrates lived 450 million years ago.

The latest findings made by Zhu’s team presented a set of five surprisingly well-preserved fish fossils that included three whole-bodied fish, helping scientists paint a more accurate evolutionary picture of the origin of the jaw. The fish fossils were discovered at two sites in Chongqing and Guizhou, whose strata (岩层) date back to the Silurian Period that began around 440 million years ago.

These fossils show that jawed fish were already thriving (繁荣) in the world’s ancient oceans at that time. Later on, more diverse and larger jawed fish evolved and began to spread around the world, paving the way for some fish to eventually go on land and evolve into other animals — including humans.

“These fossils provide an unprecedented (前所未有的) opportunity to peek into the ‘dawn of fish’ and help scientists trace many human body structures back to these ancient fish thus filling some key gaps in the evolutionary history of how fish evolved into humans,” Zhu said.

1. In which column of a magazine will you most probably read the passage?
A.Your Voice.B.Animals.
C.Science Study.D.History.
2. Why did the findings draw a large amount of interest in the science world?
A.Because jaws are a key trait of all vertebrate species.
B.Because jaws are significant in animal evolution.
C.Because the rise of the jaw had been a mystery.
D.Because there is a lack of sufficient evidence.
3. What does the underlined phrase “at that time” refer to?
A.Around 440 million years ago.
B.Around 450 million years ago.
C.When jawed fish began to spread around the world.
D.When fish evolved into humans.
4. Which of the following is a suitable title for the text?
A.Who Are Our Ancestors?B.What Came Before Apes?
C.The Origin of the JawD.Key Gaps in Evolution
21-22高一下·全国·课后作业
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍墨西哥的潜水员们发现了世界上最长的水下洞穴,这一发现将帮助我们更加深入地了解有关玛雅文明的历史。

8 . A team of divers has recently discovered what’s believed to be the longest underwater cave in the world, just three miles from the white sand beaches of the Mexican resort (度假胜地) of Tulum.

The findings confirm that the huge 164-mile-long Sac Actun system is connected to the 53-mile-long Dos Ojos system, bringing the total length of the caves to amazing 216 miles. Some of the caves have a depth of more than 332 feet.

With more than 200 caves, they thought there was chance that something record-breaking would be found below the surface-they just had no proof-until now. Divers have long known that Tulum’s underground caves and rivers are frequently connected, but finding this connection was a task that involved years of searching through labyrinthine (复杂的) passageways.

More exciting than the amazing underwater photographs coming out of the caves is the possibility of uncovering the secrets of the Maya civilization, which ruled this region before the 16th century.

“The area also has lots of historical treasures,” said underwater archaeologist and project director Guillermo de Anda. “Parts of the region were inhabited by the ancient Maya civilization before the Spanish conquest in the 16th century. The discovery will help us better understand the rich culture in the region.”

The combined cave will be known as the Sac Actun system. But while its size makes it the longest underwater cave, it can’t take the title of the longest cave. That belongs to the Mammoth Cave in the American hillsides of Kentucky-thought to be near double the length. They’ll need to keep diving to beat that one.

1. What discovery have the divers recently made?
A.There are more than 200 caves in the area.
B.Some of the caves have a depth of more than 332 feet.
C.There is something record-breaking below the surface.
D.The Sac Actun system is connected to the Dos Ojos system.
2. What made researchers extraordinarily excited about the discovery?
A.They might discover more caves in the area.
B.They might find some unique animals in the caves.
C.It might help them better understand the area’s history.
D.It might greatly contribute to the tourism in the area.
3. What’s the length of the longest cave that has been discovered in the world?
A.52 miles.B.164 miles.C.216miles.D.Over 400 miles.
4. What is probably the passage?
A.A book review.B.A science report.C.A history textbook.D.A tour guide.
2022-07-20更新 | 67次组卷 | 3卷引用:阅读理解变式题-科普知识
21-22高三下·湖北武汉·期中
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了一项新的研究发现,研究人员发现五个古代脚印,这些脚印显示出原始人直立行走的特征。

9 . An individual from an unknown hominid (原始人类) species walked across a field of wet, volcanic ash in what is now East Africa around 3.66 million years ago, leaving behind a handful of footprints.

Those five ancient footprints, largely ignored since they were partly unearthed at Tanzania’s Laetoli site in 1976, show features of upright walking by a hominid, a new study finds. Researchers had previously considered them hard to classify, possibly produced by a young bear that took a few steps while standing. But the latest analysis refutes that suggestion.

McNutt, DeSilva, who started the new investigation as a Dartmouth College graduate student, and their colleagues fully dug out and cleaned the five Laetoli footprints in June 2019. Then they measured, photographed and 3-D scanned the ancient tracks. McNutt’s group focused on two footprints that were particularly well-preserved. Foot shapes, sizes, and walking characteristics of the Laetoli individual differed in various ways from those of other hominid individuals at the same site. The prints also didn’t match those from modern black bears and modern chimps (黑猩猩) walking upright.

The Laetoli individual possessed a wider, more chimplike foot than humans, the researchers say. Its big toe stuck out slightly from the second toe (脚趾), but not to the degree observed in chimps. On one step, the Laetoli individual’s left leg crossed in front of the right leg, leaving a left footprint directly in front of the previous track. People may cross-step in this way when trying to regain balance. And bears and chimps assume a relatively wide standing due to knee and other bone arrangements that prevent them from walking like the Laetoli individual and probably from cross-stepping, the scientists say.

Given that only two of the ancient footprints are complete enough to analyze thoroughly, the possibility that a chimp other than a hominid made the Laetoli footprints can’t be ruled out, says William Harcourt Smith, a scientist at Lehman College. But evidence of cross-stepping is enough to prove that it was a hominid track maker, he says.

1. What does the underlined word “refutes” in Paragraph 2 mean?
A.Objects to.B.Supports.C.Puts forward.D.Criticizes.
2. Why do researchers think the footprints were unlike those of bears or chimps?
A.They are less chimplike.B.They have toes sticking out.
C.They show relatively wide standing.D.They possess features of cross-stepping.
3. What does William think of the new research finding?
A.It’s convincing.B.It’s challenging.
C.It’s confusing.D.It’s conflicting.
4. What is the purpose of the text?
A.To describe a major event.B.To share a new discovery.
C.To introduce an unknown species.D.To settle a huge disagreement.
共计 平均难度:一般