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阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章简要介绍了根据一项对空气中塑料颗粒的研究,全球范围内的微塑料污染正在急剧增加。

1 . Microplastic pollution is increasing dramatically around the globe, according to a study of airborne (空气传播的) plastic particles (粒子).

People are already known to breathe, drink and eat microplastics, and research suggests that pollution levels will continue to rise rapidly. The researchers said that breathing in these particles can damage lung tissue and lead to serious diseases.

Professor Natalie Mahowald, at Cornell University in the US and part of the research team, said, “But maybe we could solve this before it becomes a huge problem, if we manage our plastics better, before they accumulate (积聚) in the environment and move around quickly everywhere.”

The research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, examined airborne microplastics, which have been far less studied than plastic in oceans and rivers.

The team gathered more than 300 samples of airborne microplastics from 11 sites across the western US. These were the basis for atmospheric modeling that estimated (估计) the contribution from different sources, and was the first such study to do so.

They found that roads were the main factor in the western US, linked to about 85 percent of the microplastics in the air. These are likely to include particles from tires on vehicles, and plastics from litter that had been broken down.

The researchers enlarged their modeling work to a global level and this suggested that while roads are also likely to be the main driver of airborne plastics in Europe, South America and Australia, plastic particles blown up from fields may be a much bigger factor in Africa and Asia.

Professor Andreas Stohl of the University of Vienna’s Faculty of Earth Sciences, and not part of the study team, said, “The study confirms the global-scale nature of microplastic transport in the atmosphere and does a good job in highlighting highly relevant and concerning possibilities, but more measurement data is needed to get a better idea of the sources.”

1. What did the researchers find out about airborne plastic pollution?
A.Its impact varies on different continents.
B.Public transportation takes responsibility for it.
C.Its main driver differs across continents.
D.Africa is suffering the most from the pollution.
2. According to Professor Andreas Stohl, what is the next step of the study?
A.To predict the possible damages of microplastics.
B.To get more data to understand the sources of microplastics.
C.To understand the nature of airborne plastic pollution globally.
D.To improve the method of collecting samples of microplastics.
3. What could be the best title for the text?
A.Effects of microplastics on human health
B.Possible solutions to microplastic pollution
C.Microplastic pollution on the global scale
D.Microplastic pollution rising rapidly in the air
4. Which section of the newspaper may this article be found in?
A.Society.B.Nature.C.Health.D.Science.
2023-04-20更新 | 84次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省浙北G2联盟 2022-2023学年高一下学期4月期中联考英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。虽然塑料造成了很多问题,但是停止使用塑料是难以想象的。文章从塑料在医疗应用、维持健康、食品体系等方面的广泛运用,以及清除塑料带来的糟糕的连锁反应方面,介绍了停止使用塑料的后果。

2 . Of the 8,300 million tons of virgin (原始的) plastic produced up to the end of 2015, 6,300 million tons have been discarded (丢弃). Most of that plastic waste is still with us, buried in landfills or polluting the environment. Microplastics have been found in Antarctic sea ice, in the guts of animals that live in the deepest ocean trenches and in drinking water around the world.

But what if we could wave a magic wand and remove all plastics from our lives? For the sake of the planet, it would be a tempting prospect — but we’d quickly find out just how far plastic has spread to every aspect of our existence.

In hospitals, the loss of plastic would be devastating. “Imagine trying to run a dialysis (透析) unit with no plastic”, says Sharon George, senior lecturer in environmental sustainability and green technology at Keele University in the UK. Plastic is used in gloves, tubing, blood bags, sample tubes and more.

Some everyday plastic items are also vital for protecting health. Face masks, including plastic-based surgical masks and respirators (人工呼吸器), as well as reusable cloth masks, have helped slow the spread of the COVID-19 virus. “A mask that you have for COVID is related to our safety and the safety of others,” says George. “The impact of taking that away could be loss of life if you took it away on a big scale.”

Our food system would also quickly come apart. We use packaging to protect food from damage in transit and preserve it long enough to reach supermarket shelves, as well as for communication and marketing. “I cannot imagine how plastic would be replaced completely in our system,” says Eleni Iacovidou, a lecturer in environmental management at Brunel University London.

Swapping out plastic packaging would have knock-on (产生连锁反应的) environmental effects. While glass has some advantages over plastic, such as being endlessly recyclable, a one-liter glass bottle can weigh as much as 800 g compared to a 40 g plastic one. When those heavier bottles and jars need to be transported over long distances, carbon emissions grow even more.

It’s clear that replacing one material with another won’t solve all our plastic problems.

1. What is the purpose of the first paragraph?
A.To give a definition.B.To report on a study.
C.To introduce a topic.D.To describe a phenomenon.
2. What does the underlined word “devastating” in Paragraph 3 most probably mean?
A.Interesting.B.Practical.C.Predictable.D.Destructive.
3. What is Eleni Iacovidou’s attitude toward removing plastic totally in food system?
A.Doubtful.B.Supportive.C.Optimistic.D.Uninterested.
4. Which would be the best title for the text?
A.What if we stopped using plastic?
B.Is plastic packaging bad for the environment?
C.More recycling won’t solve plastic pollution
D.Swapping out plastic for sustainable living
2023-04-17更新 | 167次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省宁波三锋教研联盟2022-2023学年高二下学期期中联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了材料工程师Nzambi Matee通过自己的努力,创造性地解决塑料垃圾污染的问题。

3 . Kenya has been at the forefront (前沿) of the global war on plastic since the government banned single-use plastics in protected areas in June 2020. Unfortunately, the preventive measures have barely received attention. Hundreds of tons of industrial and consumer polymer waste continue to get dumped into landfills daily. However, if 29-year-old Nzambi Matee has her way, the unsightly plastic heaps will soon be transformed into colorful bricks.

The materials engineer’s seeking to find a practical solution to control plastic pollution began in 2017. She quit her job and set up a small lab in her mother’s backyard. It took her nine months to produce the first brick and even longer to convince a partner to help build the machinery to make them. But the determined eco-entrepreneur was confident in her idea and did not give up.

She says, “I wanted to use my education to handle plastic waste pollution. But I was very clear that the solution had to be practical, sustainable, and affordable. The best way to do this was by channeling the waste into the construction space and finding the most efficient and affordable material to build homes.” Her company produces over 1,500 bricks a day. The pavers are made using a mix of plastic products that cannot be reprocessed or recycled.

The collected plastic is mixed with sand, heated at very high temperatures, and compressed (压缩) into bricks that vary in color and thickness. The resulting product is stronger, lighter, and about 30 percent cheaper than concrete bricks. More importantly, it helps repurpose the lowest quality of plastic. “There is that waste they cannot process anymore; they cannot recycle. That is what we get.” Matee says.

Matee is not nearly done. Her dream is to reduce the mountain of trash to just a hill by increasing production and expanding her offerings. She says, “The more we recycle the plastic, the more we produce affordable housing, the more we created more employment for the youth.”

1. What does the underlined sentence in paragraph 1 imply?
A.Matee’s method can be effective if adopted.B.Matee’s idea has been widely accepted.
C.Colorful bricks are in huge demand.D.Plastic waste hasn’t attracted enough attention.
2. Which of the following can best describe Nzambi Matee?
A.Generous and ambitious.B.Confident and grateful.
C.Creative and resolved.D.Optimistic and modest.
3. What is Nzambi Matee’s ultimate purpose in using a mix of plastic products?
A.to build cheaper houses.B.to support the government.
C.to create job opportunities.D.to tackle plastic pollution.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.Kenya: Pioneer in Banning Plastic Single-use Plastics
B.Nzambi Matee: Innovator in Solving Plastic Waste
C.Mix of Plastic Products: A New Construction Material
D.Plastic Recycling: A Creative Solution to Pollution
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。主要介绍了限额交易制度及其对环境的影响。

4 . A cap and trade system is a method for managing pollution, with the end goal of reducing the overall pollution in a nation, region, or industry. Many supporters of pollution control are in favor of the concept of such systems, arguing that well-designed cap and trade systems are extremely effective, and that they make sense economically as well.

Under a cap and trade system, a government authority first sets a cap, deciding how much pollution in total will be allowed. Next, companies are issued credits, essentially licenses to pollute, based on how large they are, what industries they work in, and so forth. If a company comes in below its cap, it has extra credits that it may trade with other companies.

For companies that come in below their caps, this system is great, because they can sell their extra credits, profiting while reducing their pollution. For companies that cannot get their pollution under control, the system punishes them for their excess pollution while still bringing overall pollution rates down. In a sense, the need to purchase credits acts as a fine, encouraging companies to reduce their emissions.

By creating a cap, nations make it clear that they want to reduce overall emissions, rather than just fining companies for excessive emissions or trying to force all companies to reduce their emissions by a set percentage. Cap and trade systems allow for flexibility, which usually benefits the market. Some people view the concept as preferable to a taxation or fining system, because it is easier to administer and it results in a pollution reduction. These systems are most commonly used for carbon emissions, leading people to refer to it as “carbon trading”, and there is a potential for a global carbon trading market, in which more efficient nations could trade credits with other countries.

1. What can be inferred about the cap and trade system?
A.It can greatly promote economy in a nation.
B.It will soon be welcomed by all companies.
C.It is well-designed and extremely effective.
D.It is environmentally and economically friendly.
2. What kind of companies can trade their extra credits?
A.Those who always have more extra credits.
B.Those whose overall pollution is below their caps.
C.Those who have never been fined for overall pollution.
D.Those who help other companies reduce their pollution.
3. What do we learn from the last paragraph?
A.All the pollution will be reduced by the cap and trade system.
B.Carbon trading is likely to be conducted among countries.
C.Carbon trade is more effective than the cap and trade system.
D.The taxation and fining system now is out of use.
4. What is the passage mainly about?
A.The use of credits in reducing pollution.
B.Efficient ways to manage overall pollution.
C.An introduction of the cap and trade system.
D.Potential application of the cap and trade system.
阅读理解-七选五(约220词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了塑料垃圾堆积成海,我们应当提高环保意识,改变现状。

5 . A Plastic Ocean is a film to make you think.Think,and then act.We need to take action on our dependence on plastic.We’ve been producing plastic in huge quantities.Drinking bottles,shopping bags and even clothes are made with plastic.    1     What happens to all the rest?This is the question the film A Plastic Ocean answers.

The film begins as a journey to film the largest animal on the planet,the blue whale.But during the journey the filmmakers make the shocking discovery of a huge,thick layer of plastic floating in the Indian Ocean.    2     In total,they visited 20 locations around the world during the four years to make the film.

In the film there are beautiful shots of the seas and marine life.    3     We see how marine species are being killed by all the plastic we are dumping in the ocean.The message about our use of plastic is painfully obvious.

    4     In the second half,the filmmakers look at what we can do to deal with the problem.

They present short-term and long-term solutions.These include avoiding plastic containers and recycling as much as you can.The filmmakers also stress the need for governments to work more on recycling programmes.

We make a shocking amount of plastic.Over 300 million tons of plastic are produced every year,and at least 8 million of those are dumped into the oceans.The results are disastrous,but it isn’t too late to change.    5    

A.This causes them to travel around the world to look at other affected areas.
B.Once you’ve seen the film,you’ll realize it is time to do our part.
C.It has raised public concern all over the world.
D.We live in a world full of plastic,and only a small amount is recycled.
E.But the film doesn’t only present the negative side.
F.In conclusion,we only have one earth to live on.
G.These are contrasted with dumps of plastic rubbish.
阅读理解-七选五(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍科学家们发现了海洋中的塑料垃圾已经非常严重,人们需要做些什么来保护海洋。

6 . Scientists visiting tiny Henderson Island in the South Pacific recently made an alarming discovery.     1    They calculated there were 38 million pieces of plastic. “This is not an issue to ignore. We need to do something now to protect the sea.” said one scientist.

Plastic waste in the sea has long been known about, but only now are we discovering the true extent of the problem. Plastic takes hundreds of years to decompose, so all the plastic ever produced still exists somewhere. Around 95% of plastics made are not recycled, and large amounts enter the sea. Currents(洋流) collect this waste in large circular systems called “gyres”.     2    

The problem gets worse as plastic breaks down into very small pieces, or “micro plastic”,     3     Humans also eat these fish, and micro plastic has even been found in tap water around the world. The plastic on Henderson Island accounts for just 2 seconds’ worth of global annual plastic production. That production will be three times by 2050.

    4     While diving in Greece, young Boyan Slat noticed there was more plastic waste than fish. He decided right then to dedicate his life to solving this problem. Boyan thought, why move through the sea when the sea can move through you? So he started The Ocean Cleanup project, which places very long floating barriers in the Pacific. Currents then concentrate the waste naturally so it can be collected and recycled. He hopes to reduce the patch by 50% in just five years.

“Sea plastic is a symbol of the negative effects of our lifestyle and technology,” he says. “    5     Protecting the sea from plastic is a good place to start!”

A.it goes unnoticed and finds its way to human bodies.
B.This is eaten by fish and leads to massive species loss.
C.To work with the currents would help collect the waste.
D.Our aim should be to create a new lifestyle for this century.
E.However, there are some young minds working to clean up the sea for future generations.
F.Although remote and previously untouched by humans, the island was covered in plastic waste.
G.One of the largest is in the Pacific Ocean, an area now known as the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch”.
阅读理解-七选五(约230词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了塑料的优点以及存在的问题。

7 . Around the world, people are realizing the significant problems caused by plastic waste. In the last 65 years, we have become increasingly dependent on plastic. It’s easy to understand why: it’s cheap to produce, light — therefore easy and cheap to transport — and incredibly strong and durable.     1    

One popular solution to the problem is to prohibit single use plastics. In the British supermarkets, shoppers are encouraged to make more environmentally-friendly choices in packing and transporting their food.     2     Some governments have even promised to ban the use of single-use plastic altogether by the not-too-distant future.

However, such plans may not be beneficial to eliminate (消除) the use of single-use plastic altogether.     3     This is not just because of its low cost. It’s also because infection and cross-contamination (交叉感染) are minimized. Plastic packaging is also crucial in the food industry. It ensures that food is safe for consumers.

Another issue is that alternative materials to plastic are often more environmentally harmful than plastic. Take paper bags, for example.     4     The process requires cutting trees, the emission of greenhouse gases and the production of poisonous chemical waste. Even more pollution is created when paper bags break down.

Clearly there is a need to reduce plastic waste and its impact on the environment.     5     Industries that rely on single-use plastics for people’s health and safety must be considered. Moreover, alternative materials must be evaluated strictly regarding their own environmental impact.

A.But it’s these advantages that also make it so harmful.
B.They are very fragile and rarely reusable, unlike plastic.
C.One of the fields where single-use plastic has a vital role is medicine.
D.However, simply banning their single use may not be the best option.
E.It also boosts the local economy and save costs in managing littering and waste.
F.Bans on single-use plastic items like drinking straws are also coming into place.
G.According to a research, they require four times more energy when produced than a plastic bag.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。本文主要介绍了英国灰蛾因为工业革命和近年来的环境改善的原因,发生的两次不同种群的自然选择变化过程。

8 . Natural selection is the process by which one type of animal within a species thrives (兴旺) because of certain characteristics that make it more likely to live than others in its group. The history of the peppered moth (灰蛾) is an example of the natural selection process.

In nineteenth-century England, certain types of peppered moths were able to better blend (融合) into their surroundings. During that time period, great changes were happening in Great Britain. The Industrial Revolution was part of this change, and with it came air pollution. Natural selection often takes hundreds or even thousands of years to occur. For the peppered moth, this process occurred comparatively quickly.

At the beginning of the Industrial Age most peppered moths in England were light-colored and covered with black markings, although a few moths had dark-colored wings. Because the light-colored moths blended into the light-colored bark on the trees, they could not be easily seen by birds that would eat them. The light-colored moths became easy for birds to see against the dark tree trunks. Since the dark-colored moths now had the advantage, their numbers grew. Within 50 years, the peppered moth went from being mostly light-colored to being mostly dark-colored.

In the twentieth century, the air cleared up, and the peppered moth population changed again. As tree trunks lightened due to less soot in the air, light-colored moths once again had an advantage. Their numbers increased as soot levels declined. Depending on their environment, the coloration of the moths helped them to be “naturally selected” to survive.

1. What do we know about the peppered moth’s natural selection process?
A.It was a good example of environmental protection
B.The soot levels in England did not affect it.
C.This type of color change was typical for moths.
D.The length of time was unusual.
2. What can we learn from the third paragraph?
A.Both kinds of moths preferred the dark-colored trees.
B.Birds failed to see light-colored moths blending into the light-colored bark on the trees.
C.There were more light-colored moths than dark-colored moths.
D.The color of moths was unimportant
3. Which would most likely happen if soot darkened England’s trees again?
A.Birds would eat fewer moths.
B.The population of dark-colored moths would increase.
C.Moths would not be able to stay alive.
D.Light-colored moths would disturb people’s life.
4. We can infer from the text that in England ________.
A.there were always many peppered moths
B.birds preferred to eat dark-colored moths
C.creatures changed colors to adapt to the environment
D.birds were dangerously affected by the soot levels
2022-09-25更新 | 87次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省长兴中学2022-2023学年高一上学期返校考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约780词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述一种破坏臭氧层的化学物质的水平正在不可思议地上升,并引起人们的重视和研究。

9 . Levels of an ozone-destroying chemical are mysteriously rising, despite international efforts to crack down on the problem. The uptick in the airborne chemical HCFC-141b comes even though reported production has declined steadily since 2012, leaving scientists stumped about the source. “All I can really say is these emissions are up,” says Luke Western, an atmospheric scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Global Monitoring Laboratory, who helped lead the new research.

The discovery underscores the challenge of getting rid of these once widely used chemicals, which can linger in appliances for decades. It also shows how continent-size gaps in a network of sensors make it hard to pinpoint sources of the problem.The chemical, used chiefly to make foam insulation for appliances such as refrigerators, is part of a family of fluorocarbon molecules blamed for eating away at a layer of stratospheric ozone, roughly 20 kilometers above the ground, that filters out harmful ultraviolet radiation from the Sun. The world began to wean itself off these chemicals under the 1987 Montreal Protocol, widely considered the most successful international environmental treaty. Overall, ozone-damaging chemicals have declined steadily since the early 2000s, and the ozone “holes” above the poles have begun to heal.

In 2018, however, researchers reported that levels of the banned chemical CFC-11 had been rising since 2012. An international panel concluded that surge was likely due to illicit production, much of it in eastern China, perhaps because HCFC-141b, then used as a substitute for CFC-11 because it is less destructive to ozone, was in scarce supply. Releases of CFC-11 started to fall once again in 2019. By now production of HCFC-141b should also be declining. Its phase-out began in 2013, with a complete ban scheduled for 2030. It is already being replaced by a group of chemicals that doesn’t damage the ozone layer.

But scientists say atmospheric levels of HCFC-141b are actually rising. Emissions have climbed each year between 2017 and 2021, an increase totaling 3000 tons from 2017 to 2020, the researchers estimate. The findings, based on a combination of measurements from air sensors and computer models of how the gases move through the atmosphere, were posted online on 27 April by Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, although the paper hasn’t been peer reviewed yet. The rise of the newer chemical doesn’t appear to be a repeat of the CFC-11 incident, says Stephen Montzka, an atmospheric scientist who heads NOAA’s monitoring lab and led the work that uncovered the CFC-11 emissions. “I think in the instance of 141b the situation is much murkier,” he says. Results from air sensors in South Korea suggest the problem isn’t originating from eastern China. It does seem to be coming from somewhere in the Northern Hemisphere, because levels have risen faster there than in the south.

One possibility is that unreported HCFC-141b is being manufactured somewhere in the world, Montzka says. But the blip could also be temporary, triggered as aging appliances are thrown out and the foam breaks down, releasing the gas. “Taking a close look, we realized there are possible explanations that don’t require somebody doing something that they weren’t supposed to do,” Montzka says.The monitoring work in papers like this is “critical,” says Helen Walter-Terrinoni, a member of the Montreal Protocol’s technical panel and a chemical engineer with the Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute, which represents major manufacturers. The panel reports every 4 years on the state of ozone-depleting gases and the science surrounding them. Its new report, slated for 2023, “could help shed more light on what’s going on” with the rising emissions, Walter-Terrinoni says.

For now, gaps in the air sensor network have made answers elusive. The sensors are concentrated in North America and Europe, with only a handful in East Asia and at isolated sites elsewhere. Scientists are blind to what’s happening in much of India, Russia, and the Middle East, and most of Africa and South America. “If there were emissions in those regions,” Montzka says, “we wouldn’t be able to tell you very accurately where they are coming from.”

The picture could improve in the coming years. In the wake of the CFC-11 incident, an EU-funded initiative is underway to install more sensors and close some of those gaps. For now, Montzka isn’t alarmed about the added dose of chemicals. It amounts to a “small perturbation” in the ozone layer, he says, just a fraction of 1% of the ozone-damaging power of gases now in the atmosphere.

1. Which type of writing does this passage belong to?
A.Descriptive writing.B.Expository writing.C.Persuasive writing.D.Narrative writing.
2. What is the meaning of the underline word ‘illicit’ in Paragraph 3?
A.Valid.B.Licensed.C.Constitutional.D.Illegal.
3. What is the possible reason can explain the fact that atmospheric levels of HCFC-141b are actually rising now?
A.Ground filters out harmful ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.
B.The world began to wean itself off these chemicals.
C.Unreported HCFC-141b is being manufactured somewhere in the world.
D.Ozone-damaging chemicals haven’t declined steadily.
4. Which of the following can be the best title for the text?
A.Atmospheric Levels of HCFC-141b Are Actually Rising
B.Bad Picture Could Improve in The Coming Years
C.Ozone-destroying Chemical Is on The Rise Despite Crackdown
D.Continent-size Gaps in Sensors Make It Hard to Pinpoint Sources of The Problem
2022-05-05更新 | 110次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省杭州高级中学2021-2022学年高二下学期4月月考英语试题(B5U5-B6U3)(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约400词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了塑料对海洋的污染,并呼吁我们行动起来,从最简单的事情做起保护环境。

10 . The Blue Planet 's latest episode focuses on how the plastic is having a destructive effect on the ocean and slowly poisoning our sea creatures. Researchers recently also found that sea creatures living in the deepest place on Earth, the Mariana Trench, have plastics in their stomachs. Indeed, oceans are drowned in plastics.

Though it seems that the world couldn't possibly function without plastics, plastics are a remarkably recent invention. The first plastic bags were introduced in the 1950s, the same decade when plastic packaging began gaining popularity in the United States. This growth has happened so fast that science is still catching up with the change. Plastics pollution research, for instance, is still a very early science.

We put all these plastics into the environment, but we still don't really know what the outcomes are going to be. What we do know, though, is disturbing. The ocean plastic is estimated to kill millions of marine animals every year. Nearly 700 species, including endangered ones, are known to have been affected by it. One in three leatherback turtles, which often mistake plastic bags for jellyfish, have been found with plastics in their bellies. Ninety percent of seabirds are now eating plastics on a regular basis. By 2050, that figure is expected to rise to 100 percent.

And it's not just wildlife that is threatened by the plastics in our seas. Humans are consuming plastics through the seafood we eat. I could understand why some people see the ocean plastic as a disaster, worth being mentioned in the same breath as climate change. But the ocean plastic is not as complicated as climate change. There are no ocean trash deniers(否认者), at least so far. To do something about it, we don't have to remake our planet energy system.

This is not a problem where we don't know what the solution is. We know how to pick up garbage. Anyone can do it. We know how to deal with it. We know how to recycle. We can all start by thinking twice before we use single-use plastic products. Things may seem ordinary, like using a reusable bottle or a reusable bag, but when taken collectively, these choices really do make a difference.

1. Why is plastic pollution research still a very early science?
A.The plastics pollution research is too difficult.
B.Plastics have produced less pollution than coal.
C.The world couldn't possibly function without plastics.
D.Plastics have gained popularity too fast for science to catch up with.
2. How did the author support his opinion in Paragraph 3?
A.By citing quotes from leading experts.
B.By making a comparison and contrast.
C.By presenting solid statistics.
D.By listing examples from his own experience.
3. What does the author intend to tell us in the last paragraph?
A.We reap(收获) what we sow.
B.The shortest answer is doing.
C.All things are difficult before they are easy.
D.Actions speak louder than words.
4. What is the main idea of the passage?
A.The oceans become choked with plastics.
B.The ocean plastic is a global issue.
C.The Blue Planet Has left viewers heartbroken.
D.Plastics gain popularity all over the world.
共计 平均难度:一般