[外语类试卷]大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷125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 125及答案与解析 Section A 0 The most detailed data yet on emissions of heat-trapping gases show that US power plants are responsible for the bulk of the pollution blamed for global warming. Power plants【 C1】 _72% of the greenhouse gases reported to the Environmental Protection Agency fo
2、r 2010, according to information released Wednesday that was the first catalog of global warming pollution by facility. The data include more than 6, 700 of the largest industrial sources of greenhouse gases, or about 80 percent of total US【 C2】 _. According to an Associated Press【 C3】 _of the data,
3、 20 mostly coal-fired power plants in 15 states account for the top-releasing facilities. Gina McCarthy, the top air official at the EPA, said the database marked “ a major milestone“ in the agencys work to【 C4】 _climate change. She said it would help industry, states and the federal government iden
4、tify ways to reduce greenhouse gases. The Obama administration plans to regulate emissions of heat-trapping gases under【 C5】 _law. A proposed regulation to address pollution from new power plants could be released as early as this month.【 C6】 _, the EPA will have to tackle facilities already in oper
5、ation. The largest emitters will be the first in line. The largest greenhouse gas polluter in the nation in 2010, according to the EPAs data, was the Scherer power plant in Juliette, Ga. , owned by Southern Company. That coal-fired power plant reported releasing nearly 23 million metric tons of carb
6、on dioxide, the【 C7】 _greenhouse gas, in 2010. Two other power plants owned by Southern were the second-and third-largest polluters nationally: the Bowen plant in Bowen, Ga. , and the James H. Miller, Jr. power plant in Quinton, Ala. American Electric Power, another large coal-fired power producer,
7、has three power plants in the top 20. They are in Rockport, Ind. , Cheshire, Ohio, and St. Albans, W. Va. “This is just another way to【 C8】 _the largest coal-fired power plants in the country,“ said AEP spokesman Pat Hemlepp. “We always assumed we would be No. 1 in greenhouse gas emissions or No. 2
8、behind Southern Co. We and Southern are the two largest【 C9】 _of coal. “ The other states with【 C10】 _power plants are Texas, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wyoming, North Carolina, Kansas and Kentucky. Refineries were the second-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, with
9、57% of the reported total. The top states in greenhouse gas emissions from power plants and from refineries were Texas, Pennsylvania, Florida, Ohio, and Indiana. Congress required industries to report their emissions as part of a 2008 spending bill. Until now, the agency has estimated greenhouse gas
10、 emissions by industry sector. A)existing I)analysis B)consumers J)Enormously C)released K)identify D)derivation L)compelling E)chief M)address F)emissions N)Eventually G)enchant O)diversion H)high-polluting 1 【 C1】 2 【 C2】 3 【 C3】 4 【 C4】 5 【 C5】 6 【 C6】 7 【 C7】 8 【 C8】 9 【 C9】 10 【 C10】 Section B
11、10 How Earthquake Works AAn earthquake is one of the most terrifying phenomena that nature can whip up. We generally think of the ground we stand on as “rock-solid“ and completely stable. An earthquake can shatter that perception instantly, and often with extreme violence. Earthquake facts BAn earth
12、quake is a vibration that travels through the earths crust. Technically, a large truck that rumbles down the street is causing a mini-earthquake, if you feel your house shaking as it goes by, but we tend to think of earthquakes as events that affect a fairly large area, such as an entire city. All k
13、inds of things can cause earthquakes: volcanic eruptions, meteor(流星 )impacts, underground explosions(an underground nuclear test, for example), collapsing structures(such as a collapsing mine). But the majority of naturally-occurring earthquakes are caused by movements of the earths plates. We only
14、hear about earthquakes in the news every once in a while, but they are actually an everyday occurrence on our planet. CThe vast majority of these 3 million quakes are extremely weak. The law of probability also causes a good number of stronger quakes to happen in uninhabited places where no one feel
15、s them. It is the big quakes that occur in highly populated areas that get our attention. Earthquakes have caused a great deal of property damage over the years, and they have claimed many lives. In the last hundred years alone, there have been more than 1. 5 million earthquake-related fatalities. U
16、sually, its not the shaking ground itself that claims lives its the associated destruction of man-made structures and the instigation(发起 )of other natural disasters, such as tsunamis, avalanches and landslides. Plate tectonics(板块构造 ) DThe biggest scientific breakthrough in the history of seismology
17、the study of earthquakes came in the middle of the 20 th century, with the development of the theory of plate tectonics. Scientists proposed the idea of plate tectonics to explain a number of peculiar phenomenon on earth, such as the apparent movement of continents over time, the clustering of volca
18、nic activity in certain areas and the presence of huge ridges at the bottom of the ocean. EThe basic theory is that the surface layer of the earth the lithosphere is comprised of many plates that slide over the lubricating asthenosphere layer. At the boundaries between these huge plates of soil and
19、rock, three different things can happen: F* Plates can move apart If two plates are moving apart from each other, hot, melted rock flows up from the layers of covering below the lithosphere. This magma comes out on the surface(mostly at the bottom of the ocean), where it is called lava. As the lava
20、cools, it hardens to form new lithosphere material, fdling in the gap. This is called a divergent(分叉的 )plate boundary. G* Plates can push together If the two plates are moving toward each other, one plate typically pushes under the other one. This subducting plate sinks into the lower mantle layers,
21、 where it melts. At some boundaries where two plates meet, neither plate is in a position to subduct(潜没 )under the other, so they both push against each other to form mountains. The lines where plates push toward each other are called convergent plate boundaries. H* Plates slide against each other A
22、t other boundaries, plates simply slide by each other one moves north and one moves south, for example. While the plates dont drift directly into each other at these transform boundaries, they are pushed tightly together. A great deal of tension builds at the boundary. IWhere these plates meet, youl
23、l find faults breaks in the earths crust where the blocks of rock on each side are moving in different directions. Earthquakes are much more common along fault lines than they are anywhere else on the planet. Richter scale JThe Richter Scale is used to rate the magnitude of an earthquake the amount
24、of energy it released. This is calculated using information gathered by a seismograph. Upon the Richter Scale, whole-number jumps indicate a tenfold increase. In this case, the increase is in wave amplitude. That is, the wave amplitude(幅度 )in a level 6 earthquake is 10 times greater than in a level
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