组卷网 > 知识点选题 > 环境保护
更多: | 只看新题 精选材料新、考法新、题型新的试题
解析
| 共计 480 道试题
书面表达-读后续写 | 较易(0.85) |
名校
1 . 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。

It was a lovely spring morning in the mountains of my home. Here was full of natural atmosphere. The sky was blue, the sun was warm, and the air was fresh. As driving along the winding road, I could see thousands of wild flowers in bloom. When I turned round, I slowed down as I saw some volunteers picking up garbage along the side of the road. I just smiled as I saw them doing some cleaning in spring for Mother Earth and my mind suddenly floated back in time to another spring morning long ago.

When my children were younger, I used to walk along a small route around the lake near my home. It was also on a spring morning that I noticed much garbage lying along the route. The next day, I brought a big garbage bag and started to slowly pick up the garbage along my way. All kinds of deserted objects lay all over the floor. There were pop cans, plastic water bottles, wrappers for candy bars, empty chip bags, pieces of broken fishing line and even an old shoe. Every time I stopped, I picked up a piece of garbage. And I even fished some garbage out of the edge of the water. By the time I circled the lake, the garbage bag had been nearly full.

Tired but happy, I put the bag in an empty garbage can. I stopped before I headed home and took one last look at the lake as the sun set. It looked more beautiful than ever and I felt like the angels were looking down upon it with me and sharing my smiles.

I always think that at times this world’s problems can seem overwhelming and you may wonder what you can do to make a difference. But the truth is that every good thing you do matters a lot! I do believe every time I stop to pick up a single piece of garbage, I can make a difference. As my children are adults now, I decide to spend more time protecting the environment.

注意:1.续写词数应为150左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。

I begin to encourage others to develop the environmental awareness.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Many days have passed, and the surroundings have improved a lot.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
2022-09-30更新 | 476次组卷 | 6卷引用:河北省保定市2022-2023学年高三9月份考试英语试题
书信写作-倡议信 | 较易(0.85) |
名校
2 . 假如你是学生会主席李华,请你围绕“保护环境,低碳生活”为主题,写一封英语倡议书,旨在号召大家积极采取行动,践行低碳生活(low-carbon life)。内容包括:
1. 保护环境的重要性;
2. 如何低碳生活;
3. 发出倡议。
注意:
1. 词数80左右;
2. 可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear fellow students,
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
阅读理解-阅读单选(约300词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了卢布尔雅那是第一个承诺实现零浪费的欧洲首都,介绍了其在垃圾处理方面所采取的措施和收获的成效。

3 . From the lush green hill you can see Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, in the distance. Populations of deer, rabbits and turtle live here. The air is stinky and the only signs that we are standing above a 24-metre (79 feet) deep landfill are the methane gas pipes rising from the grass.

Ljubljana is the first European capital to commit to going zero-waste. But fifteen years ago, all of its refuse went straight to landfill. “And that is expensive,” says Nina Sankovic of Voka Snaga, the city’s waste management company. “It takes up space and you’ re throwing away resources.”

So the city decided to change course.

It began in 2002 with separate collection of paper, glass and packaging in Roadside container stands. Four years later the city began collecting biodegradable waste door to door; separate collection of biowaste is set to become mandatory across Europe in 2023, but Ljubljana was nearly two decades ahead of the curve.

In 2013, every doorstep in the city received bins for packaging and paper waste. And, most controversially, scheduled collections of the residual waste were cut by half-forcing people to separate their rubbish more efficiently.

The results have been impressive. In 2008, the city recycled only 29.3% of its waste and was lagging behind the rest of Europe. Today that figure is 68%, and its landfill receives almost 80% less rubbish, putting it at the top of there cycling leader board of EU capitals. The Slovenian capital now produces only 115kg of residual waste per capital annually(the European city with the lowest figure is the much smaller Treviso, Italy, at 59kg).

1. What is the usage of the pipe rising from the grass?
A.A sign to show there is a deep landfill.B.To emit gas rising from the grass.
C.To discharge methane from the deep landfill.D.A water pipe to water grass.
2. What is the meaning of the underlined word “mandatory” in Paragraph 4?
A.Compulsory.B.Typical.C.Normal.D.Reasonable.
3. What is the author’s attitude to the change of Ljubljana?
A.Favorable.B.Intolerant.C.Doubtful.D.Unclear.
4. In which section of a newspaper may the passage appear?
A.Society.B.Geography education.C.Tourism.D.Environmental protection.
2022-03-24更新 | 258次组卷 | 3卷引用:湖北省八市2021-2022学年高三3月联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。介绍了介绍锂在能源行业的重要性以及锂的开采对环境造成的危害。

4 . Lithium (锂) is called “white gold” for good reason. The metal’s value has been growing rapidly over the last several years, mainly because it is an essential material of lithium-ion batteries, which play an important part in several key sustainable technologies, e. g. electric cars.

As ocean waves, wind and solar power have grown into major players in the energy industry, lithium has also become key to building a future free of petrol. But getting lithium comes at a huge cost. As with most metals, its mining is damaging. It often works like this: Briny water, containing lithium and other metals, is pumped to the surface from underground. Then it sits in pools to allow the water to evaporate, leaving the rest behind as poisonous matter. Workers use chemical reactions to remove the lithium from that, making it into powder which is then packaged and shipped to the buyers around the world. Any accident that releases mine matter into surrounding communities or the groundwater supply could have damaging long-term impacts.

Indigenous (原住民) communities often bear the result of the damage, and political leaders have paid little attention to their concerns. In Arizona, for example, an expanding lithium mine is threatening the Hualapai Tribe’s historical sites. And for politicians who have promised to work with native peoples to deal with it, mining lithium and other precious metals is putting them into a dilemma: How do you ensure the availability of materials which are essential to the future while protecting indigenous people’ rights?

Mining of the metal is expected to increase greatly in coming years. Over time, that will make electric cars inexpensive and, therefore, more popular.

As environmentally conscious consumers buy electric cars in ever-greater numbers, it’s important to be aware of the dirty process that powers those clean air vehicles.

1. What do we know about Lithium in paragraph 1 and paragraph 2?
A.It’s a kind of battery.B.It will be widely used in the future.
C.Only Lithium can replace fossil fuels.D.It is the same with wind and solar power.
2. What can be inferred from the mining process (开采过程) ?
A.It’s easily done.B.It does harm to the environment.
C.It costs much money.D.The workers benefit a lot from it.
3. What aspect of Lithium mining concerns the politicians?
A.The shortage of Lithium.
B.The prices of electric cars.
C.Their people will no longer support them.
D.The balance between it and environment protection.
4. Which word best describes the author’s attitude to Lithium mining?
A.Supportive.B.Indifferent.C.Worried.D.Optimistic.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇应用文。文章介绍了2022新出版的最受读者喜爱的揭示了世界的奇迹和神秘的四本书。

5 . The first rule of popular science is to reveal the wonder and mystery of the world. For that reason, Sentient (Picador), written by photographer and wildlife film-maker Jackie Higgins, is my pick of the year. According to my interviews with many readers, I select other four newly-published books in 2022.


Delicious

This book describes how our ancestors hunted and consumed ancient animals such as mammoths, bison, giant camels and many more now-extinct species. The diet of the Clovis peoples of North America was a menu described as “a record of a lost world”. This book explains how our dinners robbed the world of so many large animals. It gives inspiration for how modern humans can be at peace with nature.


The New Climate War

In 1999, Mann published a graph showing the rapid post-industrial rise in global temperatures. Two decades later, his book The New Climate War remains convinced that we can prevent climate change. This book sets out a common-sense approach to carbon pricing and a revision of the Green New Deal. Of course, there are still many people who deny that climate change is even happening.


The Geodesic Dome

Physicist Kate Greene imagines that she spends four months in a geodesic dome in Hawaii, with five other people, to mimic living in a colony on another planet. The story describes the future of our Earth. Kate makes readers cherish the natural environment. “No sunshine on our skin, and no fresh air in our lungs,” Greene turns the frustrations into a moving story.


Florida Scrub-Jay

The birds were once common across the peninsula. But as development over the last 100 years reduced the habitats on which the bird depends, the species became endangered. Mark Walters travels the state to report on the natural history and the current situation of Florida’s flag ship birds. This book can raise people’s awareness of protecting the birds’ habitats.

1. What can we infer about the author from the text?
A.He’s a column journalist.B.He’s a scientist.
C.He’s a film-maker.D.He’s a photographer.
2. Which book might be science fiction?
A.Delicious.B.Florida Scrub-Jay.
C.The Geodesic Dome.D.The New Climate War.
3. What do the listed books have in common?
A.They have happy endings.B.They record the natural history.
C.They face doubts from many scientists.D.They involve the environmental protection.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了动物因各种原因而濒临灭绝,每一种的背后都有人类的因素。文章以渡渡鸟的灭绝为例讲述了人类是如何导致其它物种灭绝的。

6 . What do the following animals have in common? Pandas, rhinoceros, Mexican burrowing snakes, pink pigeons and small tooth sawfish.

They are all endangered animals! Animals become endangered for a variety of reasons. Sadly, humans are behind every one of them!

For centuries, humans have hunted elephants for their tusks, and killed tigers for their beautiful fur, caught fish for food. While we still have elephants, tigers, and fish in the wild, we cannot say the same about many others that have simply died out!

Year 1505 was a dreadful turning point in the natural history of the island of Mauritius — European sailors discovered this beautiful island in the Indian Ocean and brought dogs, pigs, monkeys with them. The arrival of humans and those introduced animal species were bad news for dodo birds. About 50 pounds and flightless, dodo birds did not have any natural enemies until then. They picked fruit fallen from trees and built their nests on the ground. Shortly after humans set foot on Mauritius, however, dodo birds realized that they were in big trouble — men killed them for their meat, and those introduced animal species destroyed their nests and ate their eggs. The effects of excessive hunting and foreign species drove dodo birds to first become much fewer and then die out. The last dodo bird was killed in 1681.

Humans and animals have always competed for land and other natural resources. We clear an area of a forest for farming. We cut down trees and use wood to build beautiful houses. We build reservoirs to make sure that we have enough water to use. At the same time that we are trying to make our life comfortable, we destroy the habitats of wild animals.

More than once we have seen on television that rescue workers are trying their best to save seabirds in spilled oil. More than once we have heard about how emissions of carbon dioxide (二氧化碳的排放) and other gases have raised the earth's temperature and caused global warming. Pollution has a serious and long lasting effect. If we choose to do nothing and continue to pollute our planet Earth, our next generations will have to face an Earth without birds singing and beasts roaring.

1. Which of the following are NOT endangered animals?
A.Pandas.B.Rhinoceros.C.Pink pigeons.D.Dodo birds.
2. What does the underlined word “dreadful” (in Paragraph 4) mean?
A.Surprising.B.Exciting.C.Awful.D.Quick.
3. Paragraph 5 mainly talks about _______.
A.how excessive hunting led to endangerment of animals
B.when foreign species entered the island of Mauritius
C.the human activities caused the loss of habitats of animals
D.pollution played a main role in the worsening of the environment
4. What is the best title for the passage?
A.What makes the animals in dangerB.How to save the endangered animals
C.Pollution and animalsD.Don't hunt for animals
2023-03-19更新 | 221次组卷 | 6卷引用:Unit 2 Reading and thinking 同步练习2022-2023学年高中英语人教版必修第二册
语法填空-短文语填(约150词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章讲述了中国政府为保护藏羚羊所采取的行动及藏羚羊的现状。
7 . 语法填空

I paid a visit to Tibet to observe Tibetan antelopes. While     1    (watch) them move slowly across the green grass, I was reminded of their bad old days.

During the 1980s and 1990s, they were shot and killed     2    (illegal) by hunters to make profits. To make things even     3    (bad), their habitats were destroyed to make room for new roads and     4    (railway). As a result, antelopes became     5     endangered species.

In order to change this situation, the Chinese government took some measures. For example, bridges and gates     6    (add) to let the antelopes move easily and keep them safe from cars and trains. Besides, many volunteers watched over the antelopes day and night     7    (prevent) them from being attacked.

These measures prove to be     8    (effect). Its population has recovered and in 2015, the Tibetan antelope was removed     9     the endangered species list. The government, however, intends to continue the protection     10     the threats to the Tibetan antelope have not yet disappeared.

完形填空(约230词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了Jack Hanson了解了坐飞机非常污染环境和耗能以后,决定不再坐飞机旅行了。这让他获得了许多快乐,虽然有些人不理解。

8 . The last time Jack Hanson took an airplane, he was a junior at the University of Vermont. To return from a term abroad in Copenhagen, he flew from Denmark, ________ in Iceland, and landed in New York.

But the next term, one of his professors asked students to ________ their individual energy usage. And when Mr. Hanson did the ________, he realized that just one leg of that international flight ________ more energy, and more greenhouse gas emissions(排放), than all the other things that year ________ — the driving and heating and lighting and eating and everything else.

He was ________. “I just couldn’t ________ it,” he says. “It really is an extreme. It’s an extreme amount of energy, an extreme amount of ________.”

So Mr. Hanson decided to stop ________. Since then, he has traveled by train and bike and car, and has even written a song about the ________ of getting home to Chicago on an overnight bus. But he has not been on an airplane.

And he has never found travel more ________, he says. He knows that some people find this hard to ________, including many friends and family members. They decide Mr. Hanson’s approach is ________.

Go more ________, and travel begins to return to what it once was: a slow change of one place to another, a sense of space, an unwinding of time.

“Once you’ve tasted this way of ________, you understand what it’s all about,” he says.1.
A.pulledB.stoppedC.stayedD.played
2.
A.judgeB.considerC.calculateD.reduce
3.
A.performanceB.researchC.experimentD.math
4.
A.accounted forB.called forC.figured outD.turned out
5.
A.listedB.combinedC.separatedD.bought
6.
A.shockedB.embarrassedC.entertainedD.bored
7.
A.explainB.makeC.refuseD.manage
8.
A.pleasureB.wasteC.moneyD.pollution
9.
A.drivingB.heatingC.flyingD.lighting
10.
A.incidentsB.storiesC.disastersD.conditions
11.
A.joyfulB.dangerousC.upsetD.expensive
12.
A.tellB.believeC.proveD.describe
13.
A.delightfulB.inflexibleC.effectiveD.unreasonable
14.
A.carefullyB.wildlyC.slowlyD.actively
15.
A.cookingB.restingC.relaxingD.traveling
2023-02-10更新 | 203次组卷 | 3卷引用:山东省日照市2022-2023学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约230词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了16头大象从西双版纳国家自然保护区的家出发,徒步300多英里。大象群的长途跋涉始于去年3月,当时有人看到16头大象离开了保护区。文章讨论了这一现象背后存在的问题。
9 . 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。

It’s a wildlife expedition (远征) that has captivated (使着迷) the globe: a herd of 16 elephants trekking (跋涉) more than 300 miles from their home in Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve. The herd’s trek began in March last year when 16 elephants     1     (see) moving from the reserve. Nobody is clear why the herd set out on this unprecedented (前所未有的) trek. Some suggest environmental degradation may have pushed them;    2     believe they are simply lost. An expert in elephant psychology believes that they likely left because of habitat loss and increasing human disturbance,    3     may have led to decreasing availability of food and water.

“We can’t ignore the effect of rapid development of the local economy on the loss of wildlife habitat,”    4     well-known expert on Asian elephant migration wrote on his Weibo page. “Clear waters and green mountains are as     5     (value) as mountains of gold and silver. A healthy and complete ecosystem is the cornerstone of sustainable economic development.

China’s wild elephants     6     (double) in number to more than 300 since the 1990s, but their habitat has shrunk     7     nearly two-thirds over the same period. Though China has extremely harsh penalties for those     8     (catch) killing elephants, the combination of these factors     9     (mean) that the potential for human-elephant conflict will only rise. It’s     10     (extreme) challenging for them to coexist.

The big fear is that the intensity of conflict between humans and elephants can start as just a nuisance and quickly grow to the point where people or elephants get killed.

2022-11-09更新 | 419次组卷 | 2卷引用:江苏省南京市第一中学2021-2022学年高三上学期期中英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约620词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了如今的社交媒体上充斥着各种气候假信息,它们背后的公司使用复杂的算法,决定世界各地数十亿人看到了什么,这取决于你对什么着迷,也取决于支付社交媒体网站的公司选择在你面前展示什么。多年来,大型石油和天然气公司花费数十亿美元说服消费者相信他们的绿色证明,但2019年他们在可再生能源上的支出只有1%。这就是所谓的“企业洗绿”。

10 . There is a kind of climate pollution that we can’t see clearly. It isn’t in our rivers, lands or skies, it is in our minds. When climate disinformation goes unchecked, it spreads like wildfire, undermining the existence of climate change and the need for urgent action.

Like the biosphere that sustains us, the health of our information ecosystems is vital to our survival. As an artist, I feel a responsibility to create new ways of seeing the disinformation that has come to define the age of fake news.

Social media sites are honed to grab our attention. Using sophisticated algorithms, the corporations behind them decide what billions of people see around the world, dictated by what keeps you hooked, but also by what the companies paying social media sites choose to put in front of you.

Powerful corporate actors deploy clever influence campaigns via ads targeted at specific users based on what social media firms know about those people. Major oil and gas companies have spent billions of dollars over the years persuading consumers about their green proofs, when only 1 per cent of their expenditure in 2019 was on renewable energy. This is known as corporate greenwashing. Still, fossil fuel firms maintain that their climate policies are “responsible” and “in line with the science”.

To expose the scale of corporate greenwashing online, I was part of a team that recently launched Eco-Bot.Net. Co-created with artist Rob “3D” Del Naja of the band Massive Attack and Dale Vince, a green entrepreneur, Eco-Bot. Net’s AI-powered website ran throughout the COP26 climate summit, exposing climate change misinformation by releasing a series of data drops for heavily polluting sectors, including energy, agribusiness and aviation.

Academic definitions of climate disinformation and greenwashing were used to unearth posts across Facebook, Instagram and Twitter and visualize them on our website. Eco-Bot.Net then flagged greenwashing ads and posts on the original social media site with a public health warning.

By digging into our data, journalists have already revealed that companies are targeting specific demographics in order to influence public perceptions about climate change – and even alter government policy.

One data drop focused on the 100 biggest fossil fuel producers, companies that have been the source of 71 per cent of global carbon emissions. It found that 16 of these companies ran 1705 greenwashing and climate misinformation ads globally on Facebook and Instagram this year. In total, they spent more than £4 million creating influence campaigns that generated up to 155 million impressions.

Social media companies could end most of the harms from climate disinformation on their platforms if they wanted to. Flagging systems were swiftly introduced to warn users of posts containing disinformation about covid-19. The scientific consensus on human-caused global warming has been resolute for decades, so why can’t a similar flagging system be implemented for related disinformation?

It is true that Twitter and Facebook have both introduced climate science information hubs, but these are little more than PR exercises that fail to directly tackle climate disinformation on any kind of scale.

This epidemic of climate change disinformation on social media is eroding collective ideas of truth. In this post-truth age of disinformation, we hope that the public, the press and policy-makers will be able to use our data findings to see what is hidden by what we see online.

For the first time, we can witness the regional scale of corporate greenwashing. The era of climate denial and delay is largely over — except, as Eco-Bot.Net has revealed, on social media.

1. What does the word “undermine” in the first paragraph mean in the passage?
A.Dig holes in the ground.B.Make sth weaker at the base.
C.Increase or further improve.D.Put a stop to sth.
2. The author used the case of major oil and gas companies in Paragraph Four in order to ________.
A.give the readers a precise definition of corporate greenwashing
B.show the dishonest claim by fossil fuel companies on their responsible climate policies
C.demonstrate the huge investment the corporations made to exert powerful influence on the targeted social media users based on algorithm
D.emphasize the tens of millions of dollars spent on renewable energy
3. Which of the following industry contributes most to climate change?
A.energyB.agribusinessC.aviationD.social media
4. What is the author’s opinion of social media?
A.They are willing to help but feel powerless to do so.
B.They have the ability to make a change but refuse to do so as there are controversies over climate changes.
C.They have the ability to make a change and have made some sincere but fruitless efforts on it.
D.They lose their integrity in face of the money from the big corporations.
2022-04-25更新 | 234次组卷 | 3卷引用:上海市复旦大学附属中学2021-2022学年高二下学期阶段性评估英语试卷
共计 平均难度:一般