雅思托福相关IELTS雅思学术阅读练习.pdf
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1、Test 2Pilkington built a pilot plant in 1953 and by 1955 he had convinced his company to build afull-scale plant However;it took 14 months of non-stop production,costing the company100,000 a month before rhe plant produced any usable glass.Furthermore,once theysucceeded in making marketable flat gla
2、ss:the machine was turned off for a service to prepareit for years of continuous production.When it started up again it took another four months toget the process right again.They finally succeeded in 1959 and there are now float plants allover the world,with each able to produce around 1000 tons of
3、 glass every day,non-stop foraround 15 years.Float plants today make glass of near optical quality.Several processes-melting,refining,homogenising-take place simultaneously in the 2000 tonnes of molten glass in the furnace.They occur in separate zones in a complex glass flow driven by high temperatu
4、res.It adds upto a continuous melting process,lasting as long as 50 hours,that delivers glass smoothly andcontinuously to the float bath,and from there to a coating zone and finally a heat treatmentzone,where stresses formed during cooling are relieved.The principle of float glass is unchanged since
5、 the 1950s.However,the product has changeddramatically,from a single thickness of 6,8 mm to a range from sub-millimetre to 25 nun,from a ribbon frequently marred by inclusions and bubbles to almost optical perfection.Toensure the highest quality,inspection takes place at every stage.Occasionally,a b
6、ubble is notremoved during refining,a sand grain refuses to meltz a tremor in the tin puts ripples intothe glass ribbon.Automated on-line inspection does two things.Firstly,it reveals processfaults upstream that can be corrected.Inspection technology allows more than 100 millionmeasurements a second
7、 to be made across the ribbon,locating flaws the unaided eye would beunable to see.Secondly,it enables computers downstream to steer cutters around flaws.Float glass is sold by the square metre,and at the final stage computers translate customerrequirements into patterns of cuts designed to minimise
8、 waste.42206ReadingQuestions 1-8Complete the table and diagram below.Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.Write your answers in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheetEarly methods of producing flat glass7E:豆窘;W 事号:淳:?登磐:Wethod AdvqntageL:;:-I:”*也二:.三潞基;1 了:工 1.,Glass remained2.*Slo
9、w 3.Ribbon*Could produce glass sheetsof varying 4.:Non-stop process Glass was 5.20%of glass rubbed away Machines were expensivePilkington float process6.20743Test 2Questions 9-73Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet,write
10、TRUE if the statement agrees with the informationFALSE if the statement contradicts the informationNOT GIVEN if there is no information on this9 The metal used in the float process had to have specific properties.10 Pilkington invested some of his own money in his float plant.11 Pilkingtons first fu
11、ll-scale plant was an instant commercial success.12 The process invented by Pilkington has now been improved,13 Computers are better than humans at detecting faults in glass.44208ReadingREADING PASSAGE 2You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26,which are based on ReadingPassage 2 on the f
12、ollowing pages.Questions 14-17Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs,AF.Choose the correct heading for paragraphs B and D-F from the list of headings below.Write the correct number,Z x,in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheetList of Headingsi Predicting climatic changesii The relevance of the Little Ice Ag
13、e todayiii How cities contribute to climate changeiv Human impact on the climatev How past climatic conditions can be determinedvi A growing need for weather recordsvii A study covering a thousand yearsviii People have always responded to climate changeix Enough food at lastExampleAnswerParagraph Av
14、iii14 Paragraph BExampleAnswerParagraph CV15 Paragraph D16 Paragraph E17 Paragraph F45209Test 2T;HE LITTLE ICE AGE.,.,一 .:.s -4-.:.:.:.,.-:f .:.:,.A This book will provide a detailed examination of the Little ice Age and other climaticshifts,but,before I embark on that,let me provide a historical co
15、ntext.We tend tothink of climate-as opposed to weather-as something unchanging:yet humanityhas been at the mercy of dimate change for its entire existence,with at least eightglacial episodes in the past 730,000 years.Our ancestors adapted to the universalbut irregular global warming since the end of
16、 the last great Ice Age,around 10,000years ago,with dazzling opportunism.They developed strategies for survivingharsh drought cycles,decades of heavy rainfall or unaccustomed cold;adoptedagriculture and stock-raising,which revolutionised human life;and founded theworlds first pre-industrial civilisa
17、tions in Egypt,Mesopotamia and the Americas.But the price of sudden climate change,in famine,disease and suffering,was oftenhigh.B The Little Ice Age lasted from roughly 1300 until the middle of the nineteenthcentury.Only two centuries ago,Europe experienced a cycle of bitterly coldwinters;mountain
18、glaciers in the Swiss Alps were the lowest in recorded memory,and pack ice surrounded Iceland for much of the year.The climatic events of theLittle Ice Age did more than help shape the modern world.They are the deeplyimportant context for the current unprecedented global warming.The Little Ice Agewa
19、s far from a deep freeze,however;rather an irregular seesaw of rapid climaticshifts,few lasting more than a quarter-century,driven by complex and still littleunderstood interactions between the atmosphere and the ocean.The seesawbrought cycles of intensely cold winters and easterly winds,then switch
20、ed abruptlyto years of heavy spring and early summer rains,mild winters,and frequent Atlanticstorms,or to periods of droughts,hght northeasterly winds,and summer heatwaves.C Reconstructing the climate changes of the past is extremely difficult,becausesystematic weather observations began only a few
21、centuries ago,in Europe andNorth America.Records from India and tropical Africa are even more recent.For the time beforeecords began,we have only1 proxy records reconstructedlargely from tree rings and ice cores,supplemented by a few incomplete writtenaccounts We now have hundreds of tree-ring recor
22、ds from throughout thenorthern hemisphere,and many from south of the equator,too,amplified with agrowing body of temperature data from ice cores drilled in Antarctica.Greenland,the Peruvian Andes,and other locations.We are close to a knowledge of annualsummer and winter temperature variations over m
23、uch of the northern hemispheregoing back 600 years.46210ReadingD This book is a narrative history of climatic shifts during the past ten centuries,andsome of the ways in which people in Europe adapted to them.Part One describesthe Medieval Warm Period,roughly 900 to 1200.During these three centuries
24、.Norse voyagers from Northern Europe explored northern seas,settled Greenland,and visited North America.It was not a time of uniform warmth,for then,as alwayssince the Great Ice Age,there were constant shifts in rainfail and temperature.Mean European temperatures were about the same as today,perhaps
25、 slightlycooler.E it is known that the Little ice Age cooling began in Greenland and the Arctic inabout 1200.As the Arctic ice pack spread southward,Norse voyages to the westwere rerouted into the open Atlantic,then ended altogether.Storminess increasedin the North Atlantic and North Sea.Colder,much
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