[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷132及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 132 及答案与解析Part B (10 points) 0 The BBC reports that carbon dating has allowed archaeologists to pinpoint(really an average)when Stonehenge was constructed. It was between 2400 and 2200 BC, which the researchers average to a date of 2300 BC.The archaeologists hope this more precise date
2、of origin will help them figure out what the purpose of Stonehenge was. This BBC video discusses the official dig thats offering evidence for one theory. It suggests the site was a healing center. Diggers found a large amount of bluestones were once present on the site. Those stones were transported
3、 150 miles(well before Britains sweet, extensive train system)from Wales to the stony site. 【R1】 _To back up their bluestone theory, theyve found “an abnormal number“ of the corpses buried in tombs near Stonehenge with evidence of serious physical injury and disease. This suggests people traveled fr
4、om far and wide to the site to be healed by the bluestonesor primitive physicians who used the stones to offer medicinal options. In this sense, the site is thought to be a bit like a British Lourdes.【R2 】_Mike Parker Pearson, from the University of Sheffield, suggested to the International Herald T
5、ribune last year that Stonehenge was a memorial and final resting place for the dead. The wood architecture of Durrington Walls, a living quarters found nearby that may have housed Stonehenge inhabitants like priests, likely symbolized the transience of life.The archaeologists were allowed to excava
6、te a patch of earth that yielded 100 pieces of organic material from the sites original bluestones. 【R3】_That date range isnt far off one given to the body of the “Amesbury Archer,“ whom some archaeologists believe is a key to understanding why Stonehenge was built.Researchers examining his burial s
7、ite found evidence he was wealthy, powerful, and likely a metal worker. He traveled to Stonehenge from Alpine Europe, but we dont know why.【R4 】_The Archers remains were carbon dated to between 2500 BC and 2300 BC.【R5 】_archaeologist and Professor Tim Darvill told the BBC. “These two things happenin
8、g within living memory of each other for sure is something very, very important.“ The researchers also found organic material offering evidence that people lived in the area around Stonehenge as early as 7200 BC. Thats about 3,500 years earlier than previously thought.The 2300 BC date for the site i
9、s about 300 years later than previously suggested for Stonehenges origins. It will be interesting to learn what archaeologists find as they dig deeper into this ancient mystery. What they unlock may teach us a great deal about our early civilization. Its already instructing us now of how much detail
10、 is lost to time of the lives we once lived.Word count: 446A. They carbon-dated 14 pieces at Oxford University. They rounded down their result, between 2400 BC and 2200 BC, to 2300 BC because it was the average. They aim to pinpoint the date more precisely in the coming months.B. “Its quite extraord
11、inary that the date of the Amesbury Archer is identical with our new date for the bluestones of Stonehenge,“C. The researchers think this extraordinary effort signals the stones were believed to have special healing properties.D. Perhaps the very effort of transporting the stones or their exotic nat
12、ure was a statement of ability and power.E. A competing theory argues the site served as kind of a temple.F. His corpse shows signs of having both a serious knee injury and a potentially fatal dental problem. Those ailments, archaeologists posit, caused the Archer to venture to Stonehenge to be heal
13、ed.G. One year after the discovery of the Archer and his companion, and less than a quarter mile away, construction workers laying pipe stumbled on yet another grave from roughly the same period, this one containing the remains of seven individuals, at least four of whom were males, also apparently
14、related and, like the Archer, not native to the area.1 【R1 】2 【R2 】3 【R3 】4 【R4 】5 【R5 】5 In an orchestra, different instruments can play on our emotions. A softly played violin can be as soothing as the steam off of tea. A blast of a trumpet can be as assertive as a father telling a child dont touc
15、h that! The music leads our feelings based on the composers intent for the piece.【R1】 _“If our emotions are a duet played between the self and the environment, then our ability to regulate them keeps us in harmony with the outside world,“ said senior study author Dr. Tor D. Wager of the Department o
16、f Psychology at Columbia University. “Although the failure to successfully regulate emotions is thought to contribute to several psychiatric disorders, we do not fully understand how the brain regions involved interact with one another to orchestrate an emotional response and what makes attempts at
17、regulation less successful in some individuals.“【R2】 _We think the regions in the prefrontal cortext involved in that kind of emotional reappraisal basically help us modulate how we feel in the moment. As a result, like a good tuxedo at a nice restaurant, our emotions get(cognitively)dressed up to f
18、it the occasion.【R3 】_In other words: What we really feel instead of the smile we show to our angry boss.To decipher what is going on, they looked at how activity in the prefrontal cortex mediates our ability to emotionally reappraise an event. Does it do this by affecting areas of our brain that ar
19、e oldest in terms of our evolution? Those areas are central to how we experience and learn from emotions.【R4 】_One that linked with the nucleus accumbens(its related to emotional control)correlated with a greater reduction in negative emotions during reappraisal. The other pathway, linked to the amy
20、gdala(its involved in arousing our emotions and forming long-term memories), correlated with less reappraisal success. There was more negative emotion associated with the second pathway.【R5 】_Dr. Wager said, “Our findings also suggest that the existence of multiple prefrontal-subcortical pathways sh
21、ould be considered when examining how emotion is disregulated in psychiatric disorders.“The findings just add to the marvel that is the complex orchestrations of the brainand how pathways within it can conduct a Bach or a Beethoven of our emotional experiences.Word count: 376A. Scientists have disco
22、vered that a main conductor in the regulation of emotion is our prefrontal cortex, located in the frontal lobe of our brain. Brain imaging shows theres more activity in this area of the brain when people adjust the way they think of an emotional event to alter the impact on their feelings.B. The res
23、earchers for this study were interested in how the prefrontal cortex interacts with nuclei deep in our brains that are key in generating the visceral responses we feel during emotional events.C. Brain researchers report in Neuron this week that they now have a better grasp of how the brain orchestra
24、tes our emotions the way those instruments can. They studied brain pathways that have a role in how we process upsetting events by either enforcing or reducing their emotional impact.D. They found one area of the prefrontal cortex, the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex(vlPFC), was associated wit
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- 考研 试卷 英语 阅读 模拟 132 答案 解析 DOC
