[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷138及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 138 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 An accidental discovery has brought earthquake scientists one step closer to being able to predict earthquakes. As part of an effort to measure undergro
2、und changes caused by shifts in barometric pressure, a team of researchers found that increases in subterranean pressure preceded earthquakes along Californias San Andreas Fault by as much as 10 hours. If follow-up tests advance the findings, earthquake scientists may eventually be able to provide a
3、 few hours notice for people to find safe haven prior to quakes. “Predicting earthquakes is the final goal for earthquake scientists,“ says Fenglin Niu, the research teams lead author and a Rice University earthquake scientist. “This is a start. “Reporting in the July 10 edition of the journal Natur
4、e, researchers used a high-tech equivalent of a stereo speaker lowered into a bore hole near Parkfield, Calif. , a half-mile deep and five yards from a measuring device. For two months beginning in late 2005, researchers transmitted pulse signals three times per second, from the speaker to the measu
5、ring device, calculating travel time between the two stations. Surprised scientists learned the seismic waves slowed dramatically on only two occasions: two hours prior to a magnitude-1 quake, and a startling 10 hours before a magnitude-3 quake.The research team theorizes that the immense amount of
6、pressure building along the fault causes small cracks within the rock during the final hours before an earthquake, increasing rock density and slowing the transmission signals. “The more cracks you have, the slower the seismic velocity,“ says study co-author Paul Silver, a geophysicist with the Carn
7、egie Institution of Washington. Still unknown is whether there is any significance to the fact that the magnitude-3 quake had a much longer pre-seismic signal than the lower-magnitude quake, or whether it was simply because its magnitude was larger and its center closer to the sensors.If scientists
8、can flesh out the new findings during future earthquakesa two-year study at the same seismically active location begins this Septemberit could form the basis of a vastly improved early-warning system for quakes. Current earthquake-warning systems give just a few seconds notice because they detectonl
9、y P-waves, the fast-moving seismic waves that precede the more destructive waves released during a quake. Upgrading to a seismic stress meter, however, is still a long way off. “To use this for earthquake prediction, you need to know the precursor waves have a physical basis(that is, increased press
10、ure and a pending quake)and that its repeatable(with a larger sample size of quakes),“ Niu says. He also hopes to test whether the stress signals would still be detectable on a larger scale, with the two sensors spaced more than a few yards apart.Except a major effort to drill multiple, half-mile-de
11、ep bore holes along fault lines, researchers would also need to develop a surface-based detection system capable of filtering out temperature swings, precipitation and other “noise“ that could confuse their seismic readings. Says Silver, “We obviously have more work to do, but were certainly encoura
12、ged because this is what people are looking for. “1 According to the first paragraph, the team of researchers(A)aimed to push the development of earthquake prediction science.(B) measured underground changes caused by shifts in barometric pressure.(C) knew subterranean pressure would increase before
13、 earthquakes.(D)warned people to find safe places before the earthquakes.2 Which of the following is true according to the last sentence of the third paragraph?(A)The researchers dont know whether higher-magnitude quakes have longer pre-seismic signals than lower-magnitude ones.(B) The researchers b
14、elieve it important that higher-magnitude quakes have longer pre-seismic signals than lower-magnitude ones.(C) The researchers dont think it important that higher-magnitude quakes have longer pre-seismic signals than lower-magnitude ones.(D)The researchers are not sure about the importance of the fa
15、ct.3 We can learn from the fourth paragraph that P-waves(A)are difficult to detect.(B) appear shortly before an earthquake.(C) are very destructive.(D)appear during an earthquake.4 From this passage, we can infer that the author(A)holds that it is impossible to predict an earthquake.(B) is very surp
16、rised about this discovery.(C) thinks that scientists could do better.(D)thinks this discovery is very important for earthquake prediction.5 Which of the following is the best title for this passage?(A)A New Clue in Predicting Earthquakes(B) Increases in Subterranean Pressure(C) An Accidental Discov
17、ery(D)The Use of High-Tech Equipment in Earthquake Prediction5 The dawn of the oil age was fairly recent. Although the stuff was used to waterproof boats in the Middle East 6,000 years ago, extracting it in earnest began only in 1859 after an oil strike in Pennsylvania. The first barrels of crude fe
18、tched $18. It was used to make kerosene, the main fuel for artificial lighting. Other liquids produced in the refining process were burned or dumped. But the unwanted petrol and diesel did not go to waste for long, thanks to the development of the internal-combustion engine a few years later.Since t
19、hen demand for oil has risen steadily alongside ever-increasing travel by car, plane and ship. Three-fifths of it ends up in fuel tanks. With billions of Asian people growing richer and itching to get behind the wheel of a car, the big oil companies, the International Energy Agency(IEA)and Americas
20、Energy Information Administration all predict that demand will keep on rising.We believe that they are wrong, and that oil is close to a peak. This is not the “peak oil“ widely discussed several years ago, when several theorists reckoned that supply would flatten and then fall. We believe that deman
21、d, not supply, could decline. In the rich world oil demand has already peaked: it has fallen since 2005.The first revolution was led by a Texan who has just died. George Mitchell championed “fracking“ as a way to release huge supplies of “unconventional“ gas from shale beds. This, along with vast ne
22、w discoveries of conventional gas, has recently helped increase the worlds reserves from 50 to 200 years. ln America, where thanks to Mr. Mitchell shale gas already billows from the ground, liquefied or compressed gas is finding its way into the tanks of lorries, buses and local-delivery vehicles.Th
23、e other great change is in automotive technology. Rapid advances in engine and vehicle design also threaten oils dominance. Foremost is the efficiency of the internal-combustion engine itself. Petrol and diesel engines are becoming ever more frugal. The materials used to make cars are getting lighte
24、r and stronger. The growing popularity of electric and hybrid cars, as well as vehicles powered by natural gas or hydrogen fuel cells, will also have an effect on demand for oil.Not surprisingly, the oil “supermajors“ and the IEA disagree. They point out that most of the emerging world has a long wa
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