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Questions 21-24
Choose the correct letter, A, B or C.


21 Why do the students think the Laki eruption of 1783 is so important?

A

It was the most severe eruption in modern times.

B

It led to the formal study of volcanoes.

C

It had a profound effect on society.

22 What surprised Adam about observations made at the time?

A

the number of places producing them

B

the contradictions in them

C

the lack of scientific data to support them

23 According to Michelle, what did the contemporary sources say about the Laki haze?

A

People thought it was similar to ordinary fog.

B

It was associated with health issues.

C

It completely blocked out the sun for weeks.

24 Adam corrects Michelle when she claims that Benjamin Franklin

A

came to the wrong conclusion about the cause of the haze.

B

was the first to identify the reason for the haze.

C

supported the opinions of other observers about the haze.

Questions 25 and 26
Choose TWO letters, A-E.


Which TWO issues following the Laki eruption surprised the students?

A

how widespread the effects were

B

how long-lasting the effects were

C

the number of deaths it caused

D

the speed at which the volcanic ash cloud spread

E

how people ignored the warning signs

Questions 27-30
What comment do the students make about the impact of the Laki eruption on the following countries?
Choose FOUR answers from the box and write the correct letter, A-F, next to Questions 27-30.

Comments
A This country suffered the most severe loss of life.
B The impact on agriculture was predictable.
C There was a significant increase in deaths of young people.
D Animals suffered from a sickness.
E This country saw the highest rise in food prices in the world.
F It caused a particularly harsh winter.

Countries
27 Iceland 
28 Egypt 
29 UK 
30 USA 

PART 3

ADAM: So, Michelle, shall we make a start on our presentation?

亚当:那么,米歇尔,我们可以开始准备演讲了吗?

We haven't got that much time left.

我们没有那么多时间了。

MICHELLE: No, Adam. But at least we've done all the background reading.

米歇尔:是的,亚当。但至少我们已经完成了所有背景阅读。

I found it really interesting – I'd never even heard of the Laki eruption before this.

我发现这真的很有趣。在此之前我从未听说过拉基火山喷发。

ADAM: Me neither.

亚当:我也没有。

I suppose 1783 is a long time ago.

我想1783年是很久以前了。

MICHELLE: But it was a huge eruption and it had such devastating consequences.

米歇尔:但那是一次巨大的喷发,造成了毁灭性的后果。

ADAM: I know.

亚当:我知道。

It was great there were so many primary sources to look at.

有这么多原始资源可供查看很方便。

It really gives you a sense of how catastrophic the volcano was.

它真的让你感受到火山的灾难程度。

People were really trying to make sense of the science for the first time.

人们第一次真正地试图理解科学。

MICHELLE: That's right.

米歇尔:没错。

But what I found more significant was how it impacted directly and indirectly on political events, as well as having massive social and economic consequences.

但我发现更重要的是它如何直接和间接地影响政治事件,以及产生巨大的社会和经济后果。

ADAM: I know. That should be the main focus of our presentation.

亚当:我知道。这应该是我们演讲的重点。

MICHELLE: The observations made by people at the time were interesting, weren't they?

米歇尔:当时人们的观察很有趣,不是吗?

I mean, they all gave a pretty consistent account of what happened, even if they didn't always use the same terminology.

我的意思是,他们都对发生的事情给出了非常一致的描述,即使他们使用的术语不尽相同。

ADAM: Yeah. I was surprised there were so many weather stations established by that time – so, you know, you can see how the weather changed, often by the hour.

亚当:没错。我很惊讶那个时候建立了这么多气象站。所以,你知道,你能看到天气是如何变化的,通常是一小时一个样。

MICHELLE: Right. Writers at the time talked about the Laki haze to describe the volcanic fog that spread across Europe.

米歇尔:对。当时的作家们用拉基雾霾来形容席卷欧洲的火山雾。

They all realised that this wasn't the sort of fog they were used to – and of course this was in pre-industrial times – so they hadn't experienced sulphur-smelling fog before.

他们都意识到这不是他们习惯的那种雾,当然那是在前工业时代,所以他们以前没有感受过硫磺味的雾。

ADAM: No, that's true.

亚当:是的,的确没见过。

MICHELLE: Reports from the period blamed the haze for an increase in headaches, respiratory issues and asthma attacks.

米歇尔:该时期的报告将头痛、呼吸系统问题和哮喘发作的增加归咎于雾霾。

And they all describe how it covered the sun and made it look a strange red colour.

他们都描述了它如何遮住太阳,使它看起来是一种奇怪的红色。

ADAM: Must have been very weird.

亚当:当时一定很奇怪。

MICHELLE: It's interesting that Benjamin Franklin wrote about the haze.

米歇尔:有趣的是,本杰明·富兰克林写了关于雾霾的文章。

Did you read that?

你读过吗?

He was the American ambassador in Paris at the time.

他当时是美国驻巴黎大使。

ADAM: Yeah. At first no one realised that the haze was caused by the volcanic eruption in Iceland.

亚当:是的。起初没有人意识到雾霾是由冰岛火山喷发造成的。

MICHELLE: It was Benjamin Franklin who realised that before anyone else.

米歇尔:本杰明·富兰克林比任何人都先意识到这一点。

ADAM: He's often credited with that, apparently.

亚当:显然,这经常被认为是他的功劳。

But a French naturalist beat him to it – I can't remember his name.

但一位法国博物学家抢在他之前发现了这一事实。我不记得他的名字了。

I'd have to look it up.

我得查一下。

Then other naturalists had the same idea – all independently of each other.

然后其他博物学家也有同样的想法。他们的观点是相互独立的。

MICHELLE: Oh right. We should talk about the immediate impact of the eruption, which was obviously enormous – especially in Iceland, where so many people died.

米歇尔:哦,对了。我们应该谈谈火山喷发的直接影响,这显然是巨大的,尤其是在冰岛,那里有那么多人丧生。

ADAM: Mmm. You'd expect that – and the fact that the volcanic ash drifted so swiftly – but not that the effects would go on for so long.

亚当:嗯。人们能预测到火山灰会迅速飘散,但没有预计到的是这种影响会持续这么久。

Or that two years after the eruption, strange weather events were being reported as far away as North America and North Africa.

或者可以谈一下在火山喷发两年后,远至北美和北非都出现了奇怪的天气事件。

MICHELLE: No. I found all that hard to believe too.

米歇尔:是的。我也觉得难以置信。

It must have been terrible – and there was nothing anyone could do about it, even if they knew the ash cloud was coming in their direction.

这一定很可怕。而且即使他们知道火山灰云正朝他们的方向袭来,任何人都无能为力。

MICHELLE: We should run through some of the terrible consequences of the eruption experienced in different countries.

米歇尔:我们应该回顾一下不同国家经历的火山喷发的一些可怕后果。

There's quite a varied range.

范围很广。

ADAM: Starting with Iceland, where the impact on farming was devastating.

亚当:首先是冰岛,那里对农业的影响是毁灭性的。

MICHELLE: Mmm. One of the most dramatic things there was the effect on livestock as they grazed in the fields.

米歇尔:嗯。最引人注目的事情之一是对在田间吃草的牲畜的影响。

They were poisoned because they ate vegetation that had been contaminated with fluorine as a result of the volcanic fallout.

它们中毒是因为它们食用了因火山沉降物而被氟污染的植物。

ADAM: That was horrible.

亚当:那太可怕了。

In Egypt, the bizarre weather patterns led to a severe drought and as a result the Nile didn't flood, which meant the crops all failed.

在埃及,怪异的天气模式导致了严重的干旱,结果尼罗河没有泛滥,这意味着农作物全部欠收。

MICHELLE: It's so far from where the eruption happened and yet the famine there led to more people dying than any other country.

米歇尔:它离火山爆发的地方很远,但那里的饥荒导致的死亡人数比其他任何国家都多。

It was worse than the plague.

这比瘟疫还糟糕。

ADAM: OK. Then in the UK the mortality rate went up a lot – presumably from respiratory illnesses.

亚当:好的。然后在英国,死亡率上升了很多,大概是由于呼吸道疾病。

According to one report it was about double the usual number and included an unusually high percentage of people under the age of 25.

根据一份报告,这一数字大约是平时因该疾病死亡人数的两倍,其中包括异常高比例的25岁以下人群。

MICHELLE: Mmm. I think people will be surprised to hear that the weather in the USA was badly affected too.

米歇尔:嗯。我想人们听到美国的天气也受到严重影响时会感到惊讶。

George Washington even makes a note in his diary that they were snowbound until March in Virginia.

乔治·华盛顿甚至在他的日记中记下他们在弗吉尼亚州一直被大雪困到3月。

That was before he became president.

那是在他成为总统之前。

ADAM: Yes, and there was ice floating down the Mississippi, which was unprecedented.

亚当:是的,密西西比河上漂浮着冰,这是前所未有的。

MICHELLE: Astonishing, really. Anyway, what do you think …

米歇尔:真的很惊人。不管怎样,你怎么看……

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