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2024年5月11日雅思阅读考试题答案

2024.05.13 15:09

2024年5月11日雅思阅读考试已经结束,来和小编一起看看本场雅思阅读的题型和答案吧。

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  一、 考试概述:

  本场考试三篇,一旧两新,难度高。第一篇动物山雀,难度适中;第二篇老题沙漠靠,2017/11/25考过,难度比较高;第三篇记忆力超群的人,题型多,难度高。

  二、具体题目分析:

  Passage One:

  文章题材:说明文(动植物)

  文章题目:山雀

  文章难度:★★★

  题型及数量:判断+填空

  题目及答案:

  1. TRUE

  2. NOT GIVEN

  3. TRUE

  4. FALSE

  5. FALSE

  6. NOT GIVEN

  7. moss

  8. feathers

  9. third

  10. 26 grams

  11. 3 weeks

  12. caterpillars

  13. imbalance

  可参考真题:剑桥17——TEST3 Passage1 The thylacine

  Passage Two:

  文章题材:说明文(生态环境类)

  文章题目:沙漠化

  文章难度:★★★★

  题型及数量:段落信息匹配+判断

  题目及答案:

  Deforestation in the 21st century

  When it comes to cutting down trees, satellite data reveals a shift from the patterns of the past

  A

  Globally, roughly 13 million hectares of forest are destroyed each year. Such deforestation has long been driven by farmers desperate to earn a living or by loggers building new roads into pristine forest. But now new data appears to show that big, block clearings that reflect industrial deforestation have come to dominate, rather than these smaller-scale efforts that leave behind long, narrow swaths of cleared land. Geographer Ruth DeFries of Columbia University and her colleagues used satellite images to analyse tree-clearing in countries ringing the tropics, representing 98 per cent of all remaining tropical forest. Instead of the usual ‘fish bone' signature of deforestation from small-scale operations, large, chunky blocks of cleared land reveal a new motive for cutting down woods.

  B

  In fact, a statistical analysis of 41 countries showed that forest loss rates were most closely linked with urban population growth and agricultural exports in the early part of the 21st century - even overall population growth was not as strong an influence. ‘In previous decades, deforestation was associated with planned colonisation, resettlement schemes in local areas and farmers clearing land to grow food for subsistence,' DeFries says. ‘What we’re seeing now is a shift from small-scale farmers driving deforestation to distant demands from urban growth, agricultural trade and exports being more important drivers.’

  C

  In other words, the increasing urbanisation of the developing world, as populations leave rural areas to concentrate in booming cities, is driving deforestation, rather than containing it. Coupled with this there is an ongoing increase in consumption in the developed world of products that have an impact on forests, whether furniture, shoe leather or chicken feed. ‘One of the really striking characteristics of this century is urbanisation and rapid urban growth in the developing world,’ DeFries says, ‘People in cities need to eat.’ ‘There’s no surprise there,’ observes Scott Poynton, executive director of the Tropical Forest Trust, a Switzerland-based organisation that helps businesses implement and manage sustainable forestry in countries such as Brazil, Congo and Indonesia. ‘It’s not about people chopping down trees. It's all the people in New York, Europe and elsewhere who want cheap products, primarily food.’

  D

  Dearies argues that in order to help sustain this increasing urban and global demand, agricultural productivity will need to be increased on lands that have already been cleared. This means that better crop varieties or better management techniques will need to be used on the many degraded and abandoned lands in the tropics. And the Tropical Forest Trust is building management systems to keep illegally harvested wood from ending up in, for example, deck chairs, as well as expanding its efforts to look at how to reduce the ‘forest footprint’ of agricultural products such as palm oil. Poynton says, ‘The point is to give forests value as forests, to keep them as forests and give them a use as forests. They’re not going to be locked away as national parks. That’s not going to happen.’

  E

  But it is not all bad news. Halts in tropical deforestation have resulted in forest regrowth in some areas where tropical lands were previously cleared. And forest clearing in the Amazon, the world’s largest tropical forest, dropped from roughly 1.9 million hectares a year in the 1990s to 1.6 million hectares a year over the last decade, according to the Brazilian government. 'We know that deforestation has slowed down in at least the Brazilian Amazon,’ DeFries says. ‘Every place is different. Every country has its own particular situation, circumstances and driving forces.’

  F

  Regardless of this, deforestation continues, and cutting down forests is one of the largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions from human activity - a double blow that both eliminates a biological system to suck up C02 and creates a new source of greenhouse gases in the form of decaying plants. The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that slowing such deforestation could reduce some 50 billion metric tons of C02, or more than a year of global emissions. Indeed, international climate negotiations continue to attempt to set up a system to encourage this, known as the UN Development Programme’s fund for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries (REDD). If policies [like REDD] are to be effective, we need to understand what the driving forces are behind deforestation, DeFries argues. This is particularly important in the light of new pressures that are on the horizon: the need to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels and find alternative power sources, particularly for private cars, is forcing governments to make products such as biofuels more readily accessible. This will only exacerbate the pressures on tropical forests.

  G

  But millions of hectares of pristine forest remain to protect, according to this new analysis from Columbia University. Approximately 60 percent of the remaining tropical forests are in countries or areas that currently have little agricultural trade or urban growth. The amount of forest area in places like central Africa, Guyana and Suriname, DeFries notes, is huge. ‘There’s a lot of forest that has not yet faced these pressures.’

  Questions 1-6

  Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.

  Which paragraph contains the following information?

  NB: You may use any letter more than once.

  1 two ways that farming activity might be improved in the future

  2 reference to a fall in the rate of deforestation in one area

  3 the amount of forest cut down annually

  4 how future transport requirements may increase deforestation levels

  5 a reference to the typical shape of early deforested areas

  6 key reasons why forests in some areas have not been cut down

  Questions 7-8

  Choose TWO letters, A-E.

  Which TWO of these reasons do experts give for current patterns of deforestation?

  A to provide jobs

  B to create transport routes

  C to feed city dwellers

  D to manufacture low-budget consumer items

  E to meet government targets

  Questions 9-10

  Choose TWO letters, A-E.

  The list below gives some of the impacts of tropical deforestation.

  Which TWO of these results are mentioned by the writer of the text?

  A local food supplies fall

  B soil becomes less fertile

  C some areas have new forest growth

  D some regions become uninhabitable

  E local economies suffer

  Questions 11-13

  Complete the sentences below.

  Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer.

  11 The expression ‘a __________ ’ is used to assess the amount of wood used in certain types of production.

  12 Greenhouse gases result from the __________ that remain after trees have been cut down.

  13 About __________ of the world’s tropical forests have not experienced deforestation yet.

  参考答案

  1. D

  2. E

  3. A

  4. F

  5. A

  6. G

  7. C

  8. D

  9. B

  10. C

  11. forest footprint

  12. decaying plants

  13. 60 percent

  *本文话题与实考一致,但是文章和题目与考试有出入,仅供各位考生复习使用~

  可参考真题:剑桥18—TEST3 Passage1 Materials to take us beyond concrete

  Passage Three:

  文章题材:议论文(心理学)

  文章题目:关于记忆力超群的人

  文章难度:★★★★

  题型及数量:多选+填空+判断

  题目及答案:

  Memory Decoding

  Try this memory test: Study each face and compose a vivid image for the person’s first and last name. Rose Leo, for example, could be a rosebud and a lion. Fill in the blanks on the next page. The Examinations School at Oxford University is an austere building of oak-paneled rooms, large Gothic windows, and looming portraits of eminent dukes and earls. It is where generations of Oxford students have tested their memory on final exams, and it is where, last August, 34 contestants gathered at the World Memory Championships to be examined in an entirely different manner.

  A

  In timed trials, contestants were challenged to look at and then recite a two-page poem, memorize rows of 40-digit numbers, recall the names of 110 people after looking at their photographs, and perform seven other feats of extraordinary retention. Some tests took just a few minutes; others lasted hours. In the 14 years since the World Memory Championships was founded, no one has memorized the order of a shuffled deck of playing cards in less than 30 seconds. That nice round number has become the four-minute mile of competitive memory, a benchmark that the world’s best “mental athletes,” as some of them like to be called, is closing in on. Most contestants claim to have just average memories, and scientific testing confirms that they’re not just being modest. Their feats are based on tricks that capitalize on how the human brain encodes information. Anyone can learn them.

  B

  Psychologists Elizabeth Valentine and John Wilding, authors of the monograph Superior Memory, recently teamed up with Eleanor Maguire, a neuroscientist at University College London to study eight people, including Karsten, who had finished near the top of the World Memory Championships. They wondered if the contestants’ brains were different in some way. The researchers put the competitors and a group of control subjects into an MRI machine and asked them to perform several different memory tests while their brains were being scanned. When it came to memorizing sequences of three-digit numbers, the difference between the memory contestant and the control subjects was, as expected, immense. However, when they were shown photographs of magnified snowflakes, images that the competitors had never tried to memorize before, the champions did no better than the control group. When the researchers analyzed the brain scans, they found that the memory champs were activating some brain regions that were different from those the control subjects were using. These regions, which included the right posterior hippocampus, are known to be involved in visual memory and spatial navigation.

  C

  It might seem odd that the memory contestants would use visual imagery and spatial navigation to remember numbers, but the activity makes sense when their techniques are revealed. Cooke, a 23-year-old cognitive-science graduate student with a shoulder-length mop of curly hair, is a grand master of brain storage. He can memorize the order of 10 decks of playing cards in less than an hour or one deck of cards in less than a minute. He is closing in on the 30-second deck. In the Lamb and Flag, Cooke pulled out a deck of cards and shuffled it. He held up three cards – the 7 of spades, the queen of clubs, and the 10 of spades. He pointed at a fireplace and said, “Destiny’s Child is whacking Franz Schubert with handbags.” The next three cards were the king of hearts, the king of spades, and the jack of clubs.

  D

  How did he do it? Cooke has already memorized a specific person, verb, and object that he associates with each card in the deck. For example, for the 7 of spades, the person (or, in this case, persons) is always the singing group Destiny’s Child, the action is surviving a storm, and the image is a dinghy. The queen of clubs is always his friend Henrietta, the action is thwacking with a handbag, and the image is of wardrobes filled with designer clothes. When Cooke commits a deck to memory, he does it three cards at a time. Every three-card group forms a single image of a person doing something to an object. The first card in the triplet becomes the person, the second the verb, the third the object. He then places those images along a specific familiar route, such as the one he took through the Lamb and Flag. In competitions, he uses an imaginary route that he has designed to be as smooth and downhill as possible. When it comes time to recall, Cooke takes a mental walk along his route and translates the images into cards. That’s why the MRIs of the memory contestants showed activation in the brain areas associated with visual imagery and spatial navigation.

  E

  The more resonant the images are, the more difficult they are to forget. But even meaningful information is hard to remember when there’s a lot of it. That’s why competitive memorizers place their images along an imaginary route. That technique, known as the loci method, reportedly originated in 477 B.C. with the Greek poet Simonides of Ceos. Simonides was the sole survivor of a roof collapse that killed all the other guests at a royal banquet. The bodies were mangled beyond recognition, but Simonides was able to reconstruct the guest list by closing his eyes and recalling each individual around the dinner table. What he had discovered was that our brains are exceptionally good at remembering images and spatial information. Evolutionary psychologists have offered an explanation: Presumably, our ancestors found it important to recall where they found their last meal or the way back to the cave. After Simonides’ discovery, the loci method became popular across ancient Greece as a trick for memorizing speeches and texts. Aristotle wrote about it, and later a number of treatises on the art of memory were published in Rome. Before printed books, the art of memory was considered a staple of classical education, on a par with grammar, logic, and rhetoric.

  F

  The most famous of the naturals was the Russian journalist S.V. Shereshevski, who could recall long lists of numbers memorized decades earlier, as well as poems, strings of nonsense syllables, and just about anything else he was asked to remember. “The capacity of his memory had no distinct limits,” wrote Alexander Luria, the Russian psychologist who studies Shereshevski also had synesthesia, a rare condition in which the senses become intertwined. For example, every number may be associated with a color or every word with a taste. Synesthetic reactions evoke a response in more areas of the brain, making memory easier.

  G

  K. Anders Ericsson, a Swedish-born psychologist at Florida State University, thinks anyone can acquire Shereshevski’s skills. He cites an experiment with S. F., an undergraduate who was paid to take a standard test of memory called the digit span for one hour a day, two or three days a week. When he started, he could hold, like most people, only about seven digits in his head at any given time (conveniently, the length of a phone number). Over two years, S. F. completed 250 hours of testing. By then, he had stretched his digit span from 7 to more than 80. The study of S. F. led Ericsson to believe that innately superior memory doesn’t exist at all. When he reviewed original case studies of naturals, he found that exceptional memorizers were using techniques – sometimes without realizing it – and lots of practice. Often, exceptional memory was only for a single type of material, like digits. “If we look at some of these memory tasks, they’re the kind of thing most people don’t even waste one hour practicing, but if they wasted 50 hours, they’d be exceptional at it,” Ericsson says. It would be remarkable, he adds, to find a “person who is exceptional across a number of tasks. I don’t think that there’s any compelling evidence that there are such people.”

  Questions 1-5

  The Reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G.

  Which paragraph contains the following information?

  Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.

  1 The reason why the competence of super memory is significant in academic settings

  2 Mention of a contest for extraordinary memory held in consecutive years

  3 A demonstrative example of extraordinary person did an unusual recalling game

  4 A belief that extraordinary memory can be gained through enough practice

  5 A depiction of the rare ability which assists the extraordinary memory reactions

  Questions 6-10

  Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage.

  Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.

  Write your answers in boxes 6-10 on your answer sheet.

  Using visual imagery and spatial navigation to remember numbers are investigated and explained. A man called Ed Cooke in a pub, spoke a string of odd words when he held 7 of the spades (the first one of any cards group) was remembered as he encoded it to a 6 __________ and the card deck to memory are set to be one time of an order of 7 __________ ; When it comes time to recall, Cooke took a 8 __________ along his way and interpreted the imaginary scene into cards. This superior memory skill can be traced back to Ancient Greece, the strategy was called 9 __________ which had been a major subject was in ancient 10 __________.

  Questions 11-12

  Choose TWO correct letters, A-E.

  Write your answers in boxes 11-12 on your answer sheet.

  According to World Memory Championships, what activities need good memory?

  A order for a large group of each digit

  B recall people’s face

  C resemble a long Greek poem

  D match name with pictures and features

  E recall what people ate and did yesterday

  Questions 13-14

  Choose TWO correct letters, A-E.

  Write your answers in boxes 13-14 on your answer sheet.

  What is the result of Psychologists Elizabeth Valentine and John Wilding’s MRI Scan experiment find out?

  A the champions’ brains are different in some way from common people

  B difference in the brain of champions’ scan image to control subjects are shown when memorizing sequences of three-digit numbers

  C champions did much worse when they are asked to remember photographs

  D the memory-champs activated more brain regions than control subjects

  E there is some part in the brain coping with visual and spatial memory

  参考答案

  1. E

  2. A

  3. C

  4. G

  5. F

  6. specific person

  7. three cards

  8. mental walk

  9. loci method

  10. education

  11. A

  12. D

  13. B

  14. E

  *本文话题与实考一致,但是文章和题目与考试有出入,仅供各位考生复习使用~

  可参考真题:剑桥16—TEST2 Passage2 How to make wise decisions

  话题词:

  1.vacuum 真空

  2.evaporate 蒸发

  3.vessel 血管

  4.ritual 仪式上的

  5.audition 试听

  6.cultivate 种植

  7.curriculum 课程

  8.curtail 限制

  9.fringe 外围

  10.invisible 看不见的

  同义替换词:

  每期10组经典雅思阅读经典同义替换积累

  1. duplicate – copy – double 复制

  2. dweller – inhabitant 居民

  3. forge – make – build 铸造

  4. invariable – fixed 固定的

  5. inventive – creative – ingenious 善于发明创造的

  6. multitude – crowd 众多,大量

  7. provision – supply 供给

  8. sustainable – bearable 可持续的

  9. swap – exchange 交换

  10. verify – confirm 核实

以上内容来源于考生回忆,仅供参考~

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