朗阁首页 > 雅思培训 > 雅思题库 > 2020年5月30日朗阁雅思阅读考题题库(六)

2020年5月30日朗阁雅思阅读考题题库(六)

来源:网络2020-05-28 雅思托福0元试学

Lily老师从业5年 已帮助 300名学员实现留学梦

Learning lessons from the past

A

Many past societies collapsed or vanished, leaving behind monumental ruins such as those that the poet Shelley imagined in his sonnet, Ozymandias. By collapse, I mean a drastic decrease in human population size and/or political/economic/social complexity, over a considerable area, for an extended time. By those standards, most people would consider the following past societies to have been famous victims of full-fiedged collapses rather than of just minor declines: the Anasazi and Cahokia within the boundaries of the modem US, the Maya cities in Central America, Moche and Tiwanaku societies in South America, Norse Greenland, Mycenean Greece and Minoan Crete in Europe, Great Zimbabwe in Africa, Angkor Wat and the Harappan Indus Valley cities in Asia, and Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean.

B

The monumental ruins left behind by those past societies hold a fascination for all of us. We marvel at them when as children we first learn of them through pictures. When we grow up, many of us plan vacations in order to experience them at first hand. We feel drawn to their often spectacular and haunting beauty, and also to the mysteries that they pose. The scales of the ruins testify to the former wealth and power of their builders. Yet these builders vanished, abandoning the great structures that they had created at such effort. How could a society that was once so mighty end up collapsing?

C

It has long been suspected that many of those mysterious abandonments were at least partly triggered by ecological problems: people inadvertently destroying the environmental resources on which their societies depended. This suspicion of unintended ecological suicide (ecocide) has been confirmed by discoveries made in recent decades by archaeologists, climatologists, historians, paleontologists, and palynologists (pollen scientists). The processes through which past societies have undermined themselves by damaging their environments fall into eight categories, whose relative importance differs from case to case: deforestation and habitat destruction, soil problems, water management problems, overhunting, overfishing, effects of introduced species on native species, human population growth, and increased impact of people.

D

Those past collapses tended to follow somewhat similar courses constituting variations on a theme. Writers find it tempting to draw analogies between the course of human societies and the course of individual human lives - to talk of a society's birth, growth, peak, old age and eventual death. But that metaphor proves erroneous for many past societies: they declined rapidly after reaching peak numbers and power, and those rapid declines must have come as a surprise and shock to their citizens. Obviously, too, this trajectory is not one that all past societies followed unvaryingly to completion: different societies collapsed to different degrees and in somewhat different ways, while many societies did not collapse at all.

E

Today many people feel that environmental problems overshadow all the other threats to global civilisation. These environmental problems include the same eight that undermined past societies, plus four new ones: human-caused climate change, build up of toxic chemicals in the environment, energy shortages, and full human utilisation of the Earth's photosynthetic capacity. But the seriousness of these current environmental problems is vigorously debated. Are the risks greatly exaggerated, or conversely are they underestimated? Will modem technology solve our problems, or is it creating new problems faster than it solves old ones? When we deplete one resource (e.g. wood, oil, or ocean fish), can we count on being able to substitute some new resource (e.g. plastics, wind and solar energy, or fanned fish)? Isn’t the rate of human population growth declining, such that we’re already on course for the world’s population to level off at some manageable number of people?

F

Questions like this illustrate why those famous collapses of past civilisations have taken on more meaning than just that of a romantic mystery. Perhaps there are some practical lessons that we could learn from all those past collapses. But there are also differences between the modem world and its problems, and those past societies and their problems. We shouldn't be so naive as to think that study of the past will yield simple solutions, directly transferable to our societies today. We differ from past societies in some respects that put us at lower risk than them; some of those respects often mentioned include our powerful technology (ie its beneficial effects), globalisation, modem medicine, and greater knowledge of past societies and of distant modem societies. We also differ from past societies in some respects that put us at greater risk than them: again, our potent technology (ie its unintended destructive effects), globalisation (such that now a problem in one part of the world affects all the rest), the dependence of millions of us on modem medicine for our survival, and our much larger human population. Perhaps we can still learn from the past, but only if we think carefully about its lessons.


Questions 27-29

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

27 When the writer describes the impact of monumental ruins today, he emphasizes

A the income they generate from tourism.

B the area of land they occupy.

C their archaeological value.

D their romantic appeal.

28 Recent findings concerning vanished civilisations

A have overturned long-held beliefs.

B caused controversy amongst scientists.

C come from a variety of disciplines.

D identified one main cause of environmental damage.

29 What does the writer say about ways in which former societies collapsed?

A The pace of decline was usually similar.

B The likelihood of collapse would have been foreseeable.

C Deterioration invariably led to total collapse.

D Individual citizens could sometimes influence the course of events.

 

Questions 30-34

Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading Passage?

Write

YES   if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer

NO    if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer

NOT GIVEN  if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

30 It is widely believed that environmental problems represent the main danger faced by the modern world.

31 The accumulation of poisonous substances is a relatively modern problem.

32 There is general agreement that the threats posed by environmental problems are very serious.

33 Some past societies resembled present-day societies more closely than others.

34 We should be careful when drawing comparisons between past and present.

 

Questions 35-39

Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F, below.

Write the correct letter, A-F.

A is not necessarily valid.

B provides grounds for an optimistic outlook.

C exists in the form of physical structures.

D is potentially both positive and negative.

E will not provide direct solutions for present problems.

F is greater now than in the past.

35 Evidence of the greatness of some former civilisations

36 The parallel between an individual's life and the life of a society

37 The number of environmental problems that societies face

38 The power of technology

39 A consideration of historical events and trends

 

Question 40

40 What is the main argument of Reading Passage 3?

A There are differences as well as similarities between past and present societies.

B More should be done to preserve the physical remains of earlier civilisations.

C Some historical accounts of great civilisations are inaccurate.

D Modern societies are dependent on each other for their continuing survival.


Answer keys

27 D

28 C

29 A

30 YES

31 YES

32 NO

33 NOT GIVEN

34 YES

35 C

36 A

37 F

38 D

39 E

40 A


分享到:

精品课程更多

雅思铂金班

课程特色:为需要强化数学员量身定制分科教学方案,精华汇总重难点题型解题技巧
适合人群:四六级

雅思钻石班

课程特色:为需要强化数学员量身定制分科教学方案,精华汇总重难点题型解题技巧
适合人群:四六级

雅思VIP班

课程特色:为需要强化数学员量身定制分科教学方案,精华汇总重难点题型解题技巧
适合人群:四六级

雅思铂金班

课程特色:为需要强化数学员量身定制分科教学方案,精华汇总重难点题型解题技巧
适合人群:四六级

相关推荐更多

  • 雅思口语话题题库

    小编为大家整理了一些雅思口语的题目,希望考生们先根据自己的能力做题,在参考答案巩固和练习, 考试中有很多易错的点,考生们要警惕注意,预祝考生们考试顺利!

  • 什么叫G类雅思考试,考什么?

    坚信大家都对雅思考试十分了解,雅思考试考试分成A类(Academic学术类)及其G类(General综合性),从1989年创立迄今,基本上是全部英语系我国的官方网认同语言表达考试。移民加拿大必须参与的雅思考试考试为G类,G类考试和A类考试一样,由英语听力、阅读、写作和英语口语四大一部分构成。

  • 考雅思是什么

    考雅思是什么雅思全名international english language testing system,简称ielts,与托福考试一样,ielts也是一国际英语水平测试,由剑桥大学测试中心、英国文化委员会和澳大利亚高校国际开发署共同管理。雅思考试分为两种模式:academic(学术类),用于测试应试者的英语水平是否能够在英语环境中就读大学本科和研究生课程,这一点与托福考试有些类似;general training(普通培训类)则侧重评估应试者是否已具备在英语国家生存所需的基本英语技能,即survi

  • 雅思的英文简称是什么

    刚接触雅思的同学,可能连最基本的知识都不清楚,等学习一段时间后,很多雅思考生在报名的时候,会发现在报名网站雅思被分为了几个类别,这让一些考生很蒙。今天小编为大家准备了“雅思的英文简称是什么”的相关资讯,感兴趣的同学可以了解一下,希望本期资讯能对大家有所帮助!

免费领取200元优惠券

沪ICP备 17003234 号 图书经营许可证:第A7651号 版权所有:上海朗阁教育科技股份有限公司 Copyright 2005 LONGRE EDUCATION GROUP All Rights Reserved