[外语类试卷]GMAT(VERBAL)阅读模拟试卷9及答案与解析.doc
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1、GMAT( VERBAL)阅读模拟试卷 9及答案与解析 0 Coral reefs are one of the most fragile, biologically complex, and diverse marine ecosystem on Earth. This ecosystem is one of the fascinating para- doxes of the biosphere: how do clear, and thus nutrient-poor waters support such prolific and productive communities? Par
2、t of the answer lies within the tissues of the corals themselves. Symbi- otic cells of algae known as zooxanthel-lae carry out photosynthesis using the metabolic wastes of the coral thereby producing food tor themselves, for their corals, hosts, and even for other mem- bers of the reef community. Th
3、is symbiotic process allows organisms in the reef community to use sparse nutrient resources efficiently. Unfortunately for coral reefs, how- ever, a variety of human activities are causing worldwide degradation of shallow marine habitats by adding nutrients to the water. Agriculture, slash-and-burn
4、 land clearing, sewage disposal and manufacturing that creates waste byproducts all increase nutrient loads in these waters. Typical symptoms of reef decline are destabilized herbivore populations and an increasing abundance of algae and filter-feeding animals. Declines in reef communities are consi
5、stent with observations that nutrient input is increasing in direct proportion to growing human populations, thereby threat- ening reef communities sensitive to subtle changes in nutrient input to their waters. 1 The passage is primarily concerned with ( A) describing the effects of human activities
6、 on algae in coral reefs. ( B) explaining how human activities are posing a threat to coral reef communities. ( C) discussing the process by which coral reefs deteriorate in nutrient-poor waters. ( D) explaining how coral reefs produce food for themselves. ( E) describing the abundance of algae and
7、filter-feeding animals in coral reef areas. 2 The passage suggests which of the following about coral reef communities? ( A) Coral reef communities may actually be more likely to thrive in waters that are relatively low in nutrients. ( B) The nutrients on which coral reef communities thrive are only
8、 found in shallow waters. ( C) Human population growth has led to changing ocean temperatures, which threatens coral reef communities. ( D) The growth of coral reef communities tends to destabilize underwater herbivore populations. ( E) Coral reef communities are more complex and diverse than most e
9、cosystems located on dry land. 3 The author refers to “ filter-feeding animals“(line 30)in order to ( A) provide an example of a characteristic sign of reef deterioration. ( B) explain how reef communities acquire sustenance for survival. ( C) identify a factor that helps herbivore populations thriv
10、e. ( D) indicate a cause of decreasing nutrient input in waters that reefs inhabit. ( E) identify members of coral reef communities that rely on coral reefs for nutrients. 4 According to the passage, which of the following is a factor that is threatening the survival of coral reef communities? ( A)
11、The waters they inhabit contain few nutrient resources. ( B) A decline in nutrient input is disrupting their symbiotic relationship with zooxanthellae. ( C) The degraded waters of their marine habitats have reduced their ability to carry out photosynthesis. ( D) They are too biologically complex to
12、survive in habitats with minimal nutrient input. ( E) Waste by-products result in an increase in nutrient input to reef communities. 5 It can be inferred from the passage that the author describes coral reef communities as paradoxical most likely for which of the following reasons? ( A) They are thr
13、iving even though human activities have depleted the nutrients in their environment. ( B) They are able to survive in spite of an over-abundance of algae inhabiting their waters. ( C) They are able to survive in an environment with limited food resources. ( D) Their metabolic wastes contribute to th
14、e degradation of the waters that they inhabit. ( E) They are declining even when the water surrounding them remains clear. 5 Two divergent definitions have dominated sociologists discussions of the nature of ethnicity. The first emphasizes the primordial and unchanging character of ethnicity. In thi
15、s view, people have an essential need for belonging that is satisfied by membership in groups based on shared ancestry and culture. A different conception of ethnicity de-emphasizes the cultural component and defines ethnic groups as interest groups. In this view, ethnicity serves as a way of mobili
16、zing a certain population behind issues relating to its economic position. While both of these definitions are useful, neither fully captures the dynamic and changing aspects of ethnicity in the United States. Rather, ethnicity is more satisfactorily conceived of as a process in which preexisting co
17、mmunal bonds and common cultural attributes are adapted for instrumental purposes according to changing real-life situations. One example of this process is the rise of participation by Native American people in the broader United States political system since the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.
18、 Besides lead- ing Native Americans to participate more actively in politics(the number of Native American legislative officeholders more than doubled), this movement also evoked increased interest in tribal his- tory and traditional culture. Cultural and instrumental components of ethnicity are not
19、 mutually exclusive, but rather reinforce one another. The Civil Rights movement also brought changes in the uses to which ethnicity was put by Mexican American people. In the 1960s, Mexican Americans formed community-based political groups that emphasized ancestral her- itage as a way of mobilizing
20、 constituents. Such emerging issues as immigration and voting rights gave Mexican American advocacy groups the means by which to promote ethnic soli- darity. Like European ethnic groups in the nineteenth-century United States, late-twentieth-century Mexican American leaders combined ethnic with cont
21、emporary civic symbols. In 1968 Henry Censors, then mayor of San Antonio, Texas, cited Mexican leader Benito Juarez as a model for Mexican Americans in their fight for contemporary civil rights. And every year, Mexican Amer- icans celebrate Cinco de Mayo as fervently as many Irish American people em
22、brace St. Patrick s Day(both are major holidays in the countries of origin), with both holidays having been reinvented in the context of the United States and linked to ideals, symbols, and heroes of the United States. 6 Which of the following best states the main idea of the passage? ( A) In their
23、definitions of the nature of ethnicity, sociologists have underestimated the power of the primordial human need to belong. ( B) Ethnicity is best defined as a dynamic process that combines cultural components with shared political and economic interests. ( C) In the United States in the twentieth ce
24、ntury, ethnic groups have begun to organize in order to further their political and economic interests. ( D) Ethnicity in the United States has been significantly changed by the Civil Rights movement. ( E) The two definitions of ethnicity that have dominated sociologists discussions are incompatible
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- 外语类 试卷 GMAT VERBAL 阅读 模拟 答案 解析 DOC
