[外语类试卷]大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷120及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷 120及答案与解析 Section A 0 Phew, what a relief. It seems that the Royal Shakespeare Company and Shakespeares Globe wont have to change their names any time soon. The squabble so beloved by academics, conspiracy(阴谋 )theorists and Hollywood fdm-makers which only surfaced in the mid-19th
2、century but continues to【 C1】 _on over the authorship of Shakespeares plays, may finally be called to a halt by a new book. In Shakespeare Beyond Doubt, leading scholars organize the arguments and evidence to prove that Shakespeare really did write Shakespeares plays. It puts paid to【 C2】_that Shake
3、speare was the Earl of Oxford(as suggested by the movie Anonymous), or Christopher Marlowe or Francis Bacon, or even Queen Elizabeth I when she was having a day off from running the country. Great. That means the rest of us can just go on seeing and enjoying the astonishing plays, which may have【 C3
4、】 _authorship, but which are constantly revealing in their examination of what it means to be human. Except that it wont. The arguments, between those who want to rewrite【 C4】_history and those who dont, will keep going, constantly fueled by any kind of conspiracy theory the madder the better and th
5、e fact that there is now so much money, and so many academic careers,【 C5】 _up in the Shakespeare industry. There is a【 C6】 _in Alan Bennetts play Kafkas Dick when one of the characters, Sydney, admits hed much rather “ read about writers than read what they write“. His wife, Lynda, is【 C7】 _uninter
6、ested in the poems of WH Auden, but alights on juicy tidbits(趣闻 )about the poet including his preference for not wearing underpants. It sometimes seems as if the【 C8】 _authorship debate around Shakespeares plays is full of Sydneys and Lyndas people for whom the life of the writer is infinitely more
7、important than the works themselves. The plays are what count and they will【 C9】 _the debate, no matter whose name is on the title page, whether written alone or in【 C10】 _, and whether someone can definitively prove whether the author was wearing underpants or not. So it should be, because the play
8、s the thing. A)mysterious I)moment B)collaboration J)scramble C)bound K)contested D)candidly L)speculations E)similarly M)literary F)optimum N)compensate G)rumble O)abbreviation H)outlive 1 【 C1】 2 【 C2】 3 【 C3】 4 【 C4】 5 【 C5】 6 【 C6】 7 【 C7】 8 【 C8】 9 【 C9】 10 【 C10】 Section B 10 Growing More Food
9、 with Less Water ASix thousand years ago farmers in Mesopotamia dug a ditch to divert water from the Euphrates River. With that successful effort to satisfy their thirsty crops, they went on to form the worlds first irrigation-based civilization. Sumerian farmers harvested plentiful wheat and barley
10、 crops for some 2,000 years thanks to the extra water brought in from the river, but the soil eventually succumbed(沦为 )to salinization(盐化 ) the toxic buildup of salts and other impurities left behind when water evaporates. BFar more people depend on irrigation in the modern world than did in ancient
11、 Sumeria. About 40 percent of the worlds food now grows in irrigated soils, which make up 18 percent of global cropland. Farmers who irrigate can typically reap two or three harvests every year and get higher crop yields. As a result, the spread of irrigation has been a key factor behind the near tr
12、ipling of global grain production since 1950. Done correctly, irrigation will continue to play a leading role in feeding the world, but as history shows, dependence on irrigated agriculture also entails significant risks. CFortunately, a great deal of room exists for improving the productivity of wa
13、ter used in agriculture. A first line of attack is to increase irrigation efficiency. At present, most fanners irrigate their crops by flooding their fields or channeling the water down parallel furrows, relying on gravity to move the water across the land. The plants absorb only a small fraction of
14、 the water; the rest drains into rivers or aquifers(地下蓄水层 ), or evaporates. In many locations this practice not only wastes and pollutes water but also degrades the land through erosion, waterlogging(水浸 )and salinization. More efficient and environmentally sound technologies exist that could reduce
15、water demand on farms by up to 50 percent. DDrip systems rank high among irrigation technologies with significant untapped potential. Unlike flooding techniques, drip systems enable farmers to deliver water directly to the plants roots drop by drop, nearly eliminating waste. The water travels at low
16、 pressure through a network of perforated(穿孔的 )plastic tubing installed on or below the surface of the soil, and it emerges through small holes at a slow but steady pace. Because the plants enjoy an ideal moisture environment, drip irrigation usually offers the added bonus of higher crop yields. Stu
17、dies in India, Israel, Jordan, Spain and the US have shown time and again that drip irrigation reduces water use by 30 to 70 percent and increases crop yield by 20 to 90 percent compared with flooding methods. ESprinklers can perform almost as well as drip methods when they are designed properly. Tr
18、aditional high-pressure irrigation sprinklers spray water high into the air to cover as large a land area as possible. The problem is that the more time the water spends in the air, the more of it evaporates and blows off course before reaching the plants. In contrast, new low-energy sprinklers deli
19、ver water in small doses through nozzles(喷嘴 )positioned just above the ground. Numerous farmers in Texas who have installed such sprinklers have found that their plants absorb 90 to 95 percent of the water that leaves the sprinkler nozzle. FDespite these impressive payoffs, sprinklers service only 1
20、0 to 15 percent of the worlds irrigated fields, and drip systems account for just over 1 percent. The higher costs of these technologies(compared to simple flooding methods)have been a barrier to their spread, but so has the prevalence of national water policies that discourage rather than foster ef
21、ficient water use. Many governments have set very low prices for publicly supplied irrigation, leaving farmers with little motivation to invest in ways to conserve water or to improve efficiency. Most authorities have also failed to regulate groundwater pumping, even in regions where aquifers are ov
22、er-tapped. Farmers might be inclined to conserve their own water supplies if they could profit from selling the surplus, but a number of countries prohibit or discourage this practice. GEfforts aside from irrigation technologies can also help reduce agricultural demand for water. Much potential lies
23、 in scheduling the timing of irrigation to more precisely match plants water needs. Measurements of climate factors such as temperature and rainfall can be fed into a computer that calculates how much water a typical plant is consuming. Farmers can use this figure to determine, quite accurately, whe
24、n and how much to irrigate their particular crops throughout the growing season. A 1995 survey conducted by the University of California at Berkeley found that, on average, farmers in California who used this tool reduced water use by 13 percent and achieved an 8 percent increase in yield a big gain
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