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2015年考研英语冲刺试题及答案—阅读理解6

模拟试题  时间: 2019-03-09 10:10:53  作者: 匿名 

If you wanted to question whether global warming is indeed upon us, last week was not the time to do it. Two weeks before the official beginning of summer, a heat wave baked the eastern third of the U.S. and Canada, driving temperatures high into the 90s and even 100s. At the same time, a flurry of scientific papers was released that seemed to explain all the late-spring suffering. In one study, French researchers reported that heat-trapping greenhouse gases are at their highest levels in 420,000 years. In another, U.S. scientists found that 57 species of butterfly may be altering their migratory patterns in response to changing heat patterns.

In light of all this, a sweltering public must have been convinced at last that it’s time to do something to cool off the overheated planet, right? Wrong. Even as the temperature was climbing, a new survey by the American Geophysical Union found that Americans are less concerned than ever about combatting global warming. “The more we talk about warming,” says the study’s director, John Immerwahr, “the [more the] public’s concern goes down.”

Such an environmental disconnect may not be much of a mystery. Environmentalists complain that over the past two years industry groups have launched a coordinated advertising campaign to torpedo the 1997 Kyoto treaty, which requires industrial nations to reduce greenhouse emissions. More than $13 million has been spent on ads to block ratification of the treaty by the U.S. Senate. “The purpose of the ads was to convince most Americans that there isn’t a problem or that it’s too expensive to fix,” says National Environmental Trust spokesman Peter Kelly.

Environmentalists also criticize President Clinton for what they believe is his failure to press the issue. Only last week, Clinton moved for Kyoto treaty changes that environmental groups see as industry-pleasing loopholes. Says Daniel Weiss, the Sierra Club’s political director: “Timid leaders communicate hopelessness.” And hopelessness breeds indifference. If such popular so-whating persists, Immerwahr warns, the public may begin grasping at phony solutions to global warming. At the end of last week, some people took comfort from the report of a vast haze of pollutants that collects over the Indian Ocean in the winter, but that researchers only recently studied. Filthy as the cloud is, it does deflect solar radiation, and that could lead to cooling. But scientists warn that we cannot simply pollute our way out of global warming. The soot drops from the hazy atmosphere in weeks, whereas greenhouse gases remain for centuries.

The way out of this gridlock, environmentalists say, is to show it’s possible to reduce greenhouse gases without sinking the economy. Solutions include cleaner cars and better wind- and solar-power technologies. Says Greg Wetstone, program director for the Natural Resources Defense Council: “When these kinds of options become available, people will feel less hopeless.” Of course, it’s also possible that only when people feel less hopeless will they press their leaders to make the solutions available.

注(1):本文选自Time;06/21/99, p62, 3/4p, 2c.

注(2):本文习题命题模仿对象1998年text2和1997年text3第4题

1. According to the author, global warming is ___________.

[A] causing a lot of trouble

[B] not as serious as it seems

[C] felt only in America and Canada

[D] what accounts for the high level of greenhouse gases

2. Speaking of global warming, American public is ______________.

[A] concerned

[B] indifferent

[C] worried

[D] frightened

3. The public‘s reaction to global warming is mainly a result of _____________.

[A] their disbelief of the existence of such problem

[B] the advertising campaign of industrial groups

[C] the high cost of fixing the problem

[D] American Senate‘s disapproval of Kyoto treaty

4. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the passage?

[A] Environmentalists urge President Clinton administration to press the issue.

[B] Kyoto treaty aims at curbing the global warming problem.

[C] American government is partly responsible for the public‘s attitude toward global warming.

[D] Industrial groups do not care about global warming.

5. It can be inferred from the passage that _____________.

[A] environmentalists support the idea of solving global warming through pollution

[B] the poor leadership of American President has produced a very bad influence

[C] American economy will suffer if global warming is curbed

[D] people have no confidence in solving problem of global warming

答案:A B B A B

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