[外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷119及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 119及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 1. 如今的大学毕业生面临的职业选择:兴趣重要还是工资重要 2. 你的观点 3. 结论 Salary or Interest 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions attach
2、ed to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 2 Earth: Melting in the Heat? Gl
3、aciers are melting; the ice caps are disappearing into the oceans; sea levels may rise by many meters as a consequence. Indigenous(本土的 ) Arctic peoples will find their food stocks gone, while flesh water supplies in Asia and south America will disappear as the glaciers which provide them melt away;
4、penguins, polar bears and seals will find their habitats gone, their traditional lives unlivable. But how realistic is this picture? Is the worlds ice really disappearing, or is it unscientific hot air? A European satellite named Cryosat was designed to provide definitive answers to some of these qu
5、estions. A launcher fault destroyed the mission in October 2005, hut the European Space Agency has approved a replacement, in the meantime, here is our global snapshot. The Antarctic Huge, pristine(质朴的 ), dramatic, unforgiving-the Antarctic is where the biggest of all global changes could begin. The
6、re is so much ice here that if it all melted, sea levels globally would rise hugely-perhaps as much as 80m. Say goodbye to London, New York, Sydney, Bangkok.in fact, the majority of the worlds major cities. But will it happen? Scientists divide the Antarctic into three zones: the east and west Antar
7、ctic ice sheets; and the Peninsula, the tongue of land which points up towards the southern tip of South America. “Everybody thinks that the Antarctic is shrinking due to climate change, but the reality is much more complex,“ says David Vaughan, a principal investigator at the British Antarctic Surv
8、ey in Cambridge, U.K. “Parts of it appear to be thickening as a result of snowfall increases, but the Peninsula is thinning at an alarming rate due to warming. The West Antarctic sheet is also thinning, and were not sure of the reason why.“ On the Up Temperatures in the Peninsula appear to be increa
9、sing at around twice the global averageabout 2 over the last 50 years. Those figures are based on measurements made by instruments at scientific stations. Earlier this year, David Vaughans group published research showing that the vast majority of glaciers along the Peninsula-87% of the 244 studied-
10、are in retreat. The ice dumped into the ocean as the glaciers retreat should not make much difference to global sea levels-perhaps a few centimeters. More worrying, potentially, are the vast ice sheets covering the rest of Antarctica. Making temperature measurements for the continent as a whole is d
11、ifficult; it is a vast place-more than 2,000 km across-there are few research stations, and temperatures vary naturally by 2-3 from year to year. But measurements indicate that in the west, melting is underway. “About one-third of the West Antarctic ice sheet is thinning,“ says Dr. Vaughan, “un aver
12、age by about 10 cm per year, but in the worst places by 3 4m per year.“ The rock on which the West Antarctic ice rests is below sea level, and British Antarctic Survey researchers believe the thinning could be due to the ice sheet melting on its underside. “It may be that the ocean is warming end th
13、ats causing the ice to melt, but there may be other reasons as well; for example, theres lots of volcanism in that area and so that could change how much heat is delivered to the underside of the ice sheet.“ Cryosat should help to pin down what is happening at the West Antarctic fringe. The radar al
14、timeters on board its predecessors ERS1 and ERS2 have been unable to map the steep slopes at the coast, whereas Cryosats instrument should be able to cope. If the entire West Antarctic ice sheet did melt, sea levels globally would rise, by around 5m. But at the moment, there is no sign of that happe
15、ning. One recant scientific paper attempted to calculate probabilities for how much West Antarctic melting would contribute to global sea-level rises during this century. The conclusions: a 30% probability of a 20 cm rise, and a 5% chance of a 1m rise. Eastern Mass And what of the big monster, the m
16、uch larger East Antarctic sheet? A recent study using altimeter data suggested it is getting thicker, by about 1.8 cm/yr; another, using the gravity satellite mission Grace indicates its mass remains stable. But could rising temperatures in time drain the ice away?. “It is not going to happen on any
17、 realistic human timescale,“ says David Vaughan. “Its so cold that you could raise temperatures by 5-10 without having much of an impact; its on rock above sea level, so warming in the ocean cant affect it.“ Largely insulated from global trends and so big as to generate its own climatic systems, mos
18、t of Antarctica appears to be immune to the big melt for now, though answers to what is happening in the west arc eagerly awaited. The Arctic At the top of the world, the Arctic is a region built on water. Around the North Pole is ocean, with ice floes crowding in each winter and thinning again in t
19、he summers. In September, we learned from scientists at the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center that the extent of ocean covered by ice is getting smaller each year, the current rate of shrinkage they calculate at around 8% per decade. Their projection is that within about 60 years, there will be
20、 no summer ice at all on the Arctic Ocean. “Overall, the extent has been declining, with some oscillations(摆动 ), since the 1970s when satellites were able to map it,“ comments Peter Wadhams, Professor of Ocean Physics at Cambridge University, U.K, and currently at the Laboratoire Oce anographique in
21、 Villefranche-sur-mer, France. “Theres been a slow decline, but now the thinning appears to be more rapid. In the last two decades, not only has the area shrunk but the ice has got thinner by about 400; the prediction is that it will vanish altogether during summers in the second half of this centur
22、y.“ Military Records Measurements of thickness come mainly from military submarines, which spent long periods under the Arctic ice during the Cold War. Peter Wadhams was one of the scientists who afterwards persuaded the authorities in Britain and the United States to declassify their data. But as a
23、 method of measurement, it is far from perfect; and satellites have given only limited help. The existing satellite fleet gives good measurements of ice extent, but is not so good at detecting thickness, partly because the orbits of satellites with radar altimeters do not cover every portion of the
24、ocean. This data deficit has led to a rival theory-that the ice is not melting at all; it is simply piling up in another part of the ocean, perhaps along the north Canadian coast. Peter Wadhams believes he has now disproved this idea. “We did an experiment where we installed a set of buoys(浮标 ) in t
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