[外语类试卷]雅思(阅读)模拟试卷92及答案与解析.doc
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1、雅思(阅读)模拟试卷 92及答案与解析 0 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. The construction of roads and bridgesRoadsAlthough there were highway links in Mesopotamia from as early as 3500 BC, the Romans were probably the first road-builders with fixed engi
2、neering standards. At the peak of the Roman Empire in the first century ad, Rome had road connections totalling about 85,000 kilometres.Roman roads were constructed with a deep stone surface for stability and load-bearing. They had straight alignments and therefore were often hilly. The Roman roads
3、remained the main arteries of European transport for many centuries, and even today many roads follow the Roman routes. New roads were generally of inferior quality, and the achievements of Roman builders were largely unsurpassed until the resurgence of road-building in the eighteenth century.With h
4、orse-drawn coaches in mind, eighteenth-century engineers preferred to curve their roads to avoid hills. The road surface was regarded as merely a face to absorb wear, the load-bearing strength being obtained from a properly prepared and well-drained foundation. Immediately above this, the Scottish e
5、ngineer John McAdam(1756-1836)typically laid crushed stone, to which stone dust mixed with water was added, and which was compacted to a thickness of just five centimetres, and then rolled. McAdams surface layer hot tar onto which a layer of stone chips was laidbecame known as tarmacadam, or tarmac.
6、 Roads of this kind were known as flexible pavements.By the early nineteenth century the start of the railway age men such as John McAdam and Thomas Telford had created a British road network totalling some 200,000 kilometres, of which about one sixth was privately owned toll roads called turnpikes.
7、 In the first half of the nineteenth century, many roads in the US were built to the new standards, of which the National Pike from West Virginia to Illinois was perhaps the most notable.In the twentieth century, the ever-increasing use of motor vehicles threatened to break up roads built to ninetee
8、nth-century standards, so new techniques had to be developed.On routes with heavy traffic, flexible pavements were replaced by rigid pavements, in which the top layer was concrete, 15 to 30 centimetres thick, laid on a prepared bed. Nowadays steel bars are laid within the concrete. This not only res
9、trains shrinkage during setting, but also reduces expansion in warm weather. As a result, it is possible to lay long slabs without danger of cracking.The demands of heavy traffic led to the concept of high-speed, long-distance roads, with access or slip-lanes spaced widely apart. The US Bronx River
10、Parkway of 1925 was followed by several variantsGermanys autobahns and the Pan American Highway. Such roads especially the intercity autobahns with their separate multi-lane carriageways for each direction were the predecessors of todays motorways.BridgesThe development by the Romans of the arched b
11、ridge marked the beginning of scientific bridge-building; hitherto, bridges had generally been crossings in the form of felled trees or flat stone blocks. Absorbing the load by compression, arched bridges are very strong. Most were built of stone, but brick and timber were also used. A fine early ex
12、ample is at Alcantara in Spain, built of granite by the Romans in AD 105 to span the River Tagus. In modern times, metal and concrete arched bridges have been constructed. The first significant metal bridge, built of cast iron in 1779, still stands at Ironbridge in England.Steel, with its superior s
13、trength-to-weight ratio, soon replaced iron in metal bridge-work. In the railway age, the truss(or girder)bridge became popular. Built of wood or metal, the truss beam consists of upper and lower horizontal booms joined by vertical or inclined members.The suspension bridge has a deck supported by su
14、spenders that drop from one or more overhead cables. It requires strong anchorage at each end to resist the inward tension of the cables, and the deck is strengthened to control distortion by moving loads or high winds. Such bridges are nevertheless light, and therefore the most suitable for very lo
15、ng spans. The Clifton Suspension Bridge in the UK, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunei(1806-1859)to span the Avon Gorge in England, is famous both for its beautiful setting and for its elegant design. The 1998 Akashi Kaikyo Bridge in Japan has a span of 1,991 metres, which is the longest to date.Can
16、tilever bridges, such as the 1889 Forth Rail Bridge in Scotland, exploit the potential of steel construction to produce a wide clearwater space. The spans have a central supporting pier and meet midstream. The downward thrust, where the spans meet, is countered by firm anchorage of the spans at thei
17、r other ends. Although the suspension bridge can span a wider gap, the cantilever is relatively stable, and this was important for nineteenth-century railway builders. The worlds longest cantilever span 549 metresis that of the Quebec rail bridge in Canada, constructed in 1918.Questions 1-3Label the
18、 diagram below.Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer.3 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1 ? Write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if
19、there is no information on this 4 Road construction improved continuously between the first and eighteenth centuries. 5 In Britain, during the nineteenth century, only the very rich could afford to use toll roads. 6 The Nineteenth-century road surfaces were inadequate for heavy motor traffic. 7 Traf
20、fic speeds on long-distance highways were unregulated in the early part of the twentieth century. 7 Complete the table below.Use ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.13 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Neanderthals and modern
21、 humans A The evolutionary processes that have made modern humans so different from other animals are hard to determine without an ability to examine human species that have not achieved similar things. However, in a scientific masterpiece, Svante Paabo and his colleagues from the Max Planck Institu
22、te for Evolutionary Anthropology, in Leipzig, have made such a comparison possible. In 2009, at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, they made public an analysis of the genome* of Neanderthal man. B Homo neanderthalensis, to give its proper name, lived in Europe and
23、parts of Asia from 400,000 years ago to 30,000 years ago. Towards the end of this period it shared its range with interlopers in the form of Homo sapiens*, who were spreading out from Africa. However, the two species did not settle down to a stable cohabitation. For reasons which are as yet unknown,
24、 the arrival of Homo sapiens in a region was always quickly followed by the disappearance of Neanderthals. C Before 2009, Dr Paabo and his team had conducted only a superficial comparison between the DNA of Neanderthals and modern humans. Since then, they have performed a more thorough study and, in
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