题目内容

 

Kiribati covers a massive 3.5 million square kilometers stretch of the Pacific Ocean, but in population terms it is one of the smallest countries in the world, with only 100,000 people. More than half of them live in the capital Tarawa—strip of coral which measures just 450 meters at its widest point. As well as being narrow, Kiribati is extremely low lying, which makes it one of the most easily influenced countries in the world when it comes to climate change.

“We are counting the days rather than the decades…We don't have the time that we thought we had previously,” Kiribati President Anote Tong said.

Pelenise Alofa returned to Kiribati six years ago. The changes she saw led to her becoming one of the islands principal climate change campaigners. "Things began to change when I came here. I realized the king tides were big, and I told them 'have you heard of climate change, have you heard of global wanning, this is part of it, you're in it,'" Ms Alofa told SBS.

Linda Uan and her New Zealand born husband John have been documenting the changing climate in Kiribati for nearly 20 years. They didn't have to travel far to film the effects of a storm three years ago when for the first time it washed through their home. "There's been a lot of changes," Linda said, “When we were little there was a definite dry season and a definite wet season, now you can't feel the difference anymore.”

Kiribati is not just facing one knock-out punch but a whole round of killer blows. Because of its sensibility to the El Nino and La Nina weather patterns, climate scientists say droughts and floods will be more severe than in the past. Warmer seas could affect the migration patterns of fish, taking away vast taxes it gains from selling fishing licenses to foreign trawlers, while increased storms are expected to destroy crops and make the limited supply of water in the shallow water pools undrinkable.

It’s a claim the country will take to Copenhagen as it seeks to get the world's big emitters (排放者) to face up to the consequences of their actions. “It's a whole world issue,” President Tong said. “It’s a moral issue…it's almost criminal.”

1.According to the passage, we can infer that         .

    A.Kiribati covers a land area of 3,500,000 km2

    B.the country's average altitude is 450 meters in Kiribati

    C.Kiribati is one of the countries facing the climate change calmly

    D.Over fifty thousand people live in Tarawa

2.President Anote’s words are quoted in order to show          .

    A.the high pressure from time      B.the importance of measuring time

    C.the different timing units       D.the personal attitude towards time

3.Which of the following statements does Ms Alofa probably agree with?

    A.The tides hitting Kiribati used to be bigger than they are now.

    B.Most people in the world have never heard of global warming.

    C.Nobody can keep away from the effects caused by climate changes.

    D.Changes in this country will make you a climate change campaigner.

4.Climate changes have brought about the consequences EXCEPT        .

    A.Severe droughts and floods       B.abundant fresh water

    C.fiercer storm and tide           D.changed living patterns of fish

 

【答案】

1.D

2.A

3.C

4.B    

 

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  Three Mexican fishermen have been rescued after drifting for about nine months across thousands of miles of the Pacific Ocean in a small boat, a hard experience they survived by eating raw birds and fish and drinking rain water.

  The shark fishermen said on Wednesday they left their home town of San Blas on Mexico's Pacific coast in November and were blown 5,000 miles off course after their 25-foot fiberglass boat ran out of gas and they were left to the mercy of the winds and the tides.Their families had given them up for dead.

  “We ate raw fish, ducks, sea gulls.We took down any bird that landed on our boat and we ate it like that, raw,”said Jesus Vidana, one of the three survivors.

  The odyssey finally ended when Vidana and the other two men, Salvador Ordonez and Lucio Rendon, were rescued a week ago by a Taiwanese fishing boat in waters between the Marshall Islands and Kiribati.

  The three men were sunburned but otherwise in good health.Vidana said they always believed they would be found.

  “We never lost hope because we were always seeing boats.They passed us by, but we kept on seeing them.Every week or so, sometimes we'd go a month without seeing one, but we always saw them so we never lost hope,”he said.

  They were lucky to be picked up in the end because they were fast asleep and only noticed the rescue boat was coming for them when they heard its engine.

  “There are no words to express it.The emotion here is very strong because we thought they were dead,”said Efrain Partida, a fellow fisherman in San Blas, which was once a Spanish port and is known for its bird life, tropical jungle and mosquitoes and sand flies.

  San Blas is home to thousands of fishermen and many have old boats without radios or life-saving device.

(1)

What would be the best title for the text?

[  ]

A.

The Nine-month Drift on the Pacific Ocean

B.

Fishermen Survive Nine Months at Sea Eating Birds

C.

Three Deaths Drifting on the Pacific Ocean

D.

The Wonder from San Blas

(2)

According to the text, it can be inferred that the news was earliest reported in ________.

[  ]

A.

July

B.

August

C.

October

D.

November

(3)

What made them unable to send signals for help?

[  ]

A.

The lack of gas.

B.

Lacking the related knowledge.

C.

There being no need for it.

D.

The boat's lacking life-saving device.

(4)

They never lost the hope of being found because ________.

[  ]

A.

they often saw the passing boats

B.

they could get enough food

C.

they knew where they would go

D.

they foresaw the rescue was coming

(5)

The underlined word“it”in the eighth paragraph refers to ________.

[  ]

A.

the fact that they stayed nine months on the sea

B.

what made them live on for so long a time

C.

the news that they are still alive after nine months

D.

the fact that they left San Blas so long

Kiribati covers a massive 3.5 million square kilometers stretch of the Pacific Ocean, but in population terms it is one of the smallest countries in the world, with only 100,000 people. More than half of them live in the capital Tarawa—strip of coral which measures just 450 meters at its widest point. As well as being narrow, Kiribati is extremely low lying, which makes it one of the most easily influenced countries in the world when it comes to climate change.

“We are counting the days rather than the decades…We don't have the time that we thought we had previously,” Kiribati President Anote Tong said.

Pelenise Alofa returned to Kiribati six years ago. The changes she saw led to her becoming one of the islands principal climate change campaigners. "Things began to change when I came here. I realized the king tides were big, and I told them 'have you heard of climate change, have you heard of global wanning, this is part of it, you're in it,'" Ms Alofa told SBS.

Linda Uan and her New Zealand born husband John have been documenting the changing climate in Kiribati for nearly 20 years. They didn't have to travel far to film the effects of a storm three years ago when for the first time it washed through their home. "There's been a lot of changes," Linda said, “When we were little there was a definite dry season and a definite wet season, now you can't feel the difference anymore.”

Kiribati is not just facing one knock-out punch but a whole round of killer blows. Because of its sensibility to the El Nino and La Nina weather patterns, climate scientists say droughts and floods will be more severe than in the past. Warmer seas could affect the migration patterns of fish, taking away vast taxes it gains from selling fishing licenses to foreign trawlers, while increased storms are expected to destroy crops and make the limited supply of water in the shallow water pools undrinkable.

It’s a claim the country will take to Copenhagen as it seeks to get the world's big emitters (排放者) to face up to the consequences of their actions. “It's a whole world issue,” President Tong said. “It’s a moral issue…it's almost criminal.”

57.According to the passage, we can infer that________.

       A.Kiribati covers a land area of 3,500,000 km2

       B.the country's average altitude is 450 meters in Kiribati

       C.Kiribati is one of the countries facing the climate change calmly

       D.Over fifty thousand people live in Tarawa

58.President Anote’s words are quoted in order to show________ .

       A.the high pressure from time         B.the importance of measuring time

       C.the different timing units          D.the personal attitude towards time

59.Which of the following statements does Ms Alofa probably agree with?

       A.The tides hitting Kiribati used to be bigger than they are now.

       B.Most people in the world have never heard of global warming.

       C.Nobody can keep away from the effects caused by climate changes.

       D.Changes in this country will make you a climate change campaigner.

60.Climate changes have brought about the consequences EXCEPT________ .

      A.Severe droughts and floods         B.abundant fresh water

      C.fiercer storm and tide             D.changed living patterns of fish

“Rising seas have forced 100 people on a Pacific island to move to higher ground in what may be the first example of a village formally displaced(搬迁)because of modern global warming,”a U.N. report said on Monday.

      With coconut palms on the coast already standing in water, inhabitants(居民)in the Lateu settlement(定居点)on Tegua island in Vanuatu moved about 600 yards(meters) inland.

      “They could no longer live on the coast,” Taito Nakalevu, a climate change expert at the Secretariat of the pacific Regional Environment Programme, said during a 189-nation conference in Montreal on ways to fight climate change. So-called “king tides” has become stronger in recent years and made Lateu uninhabitable by flooding the village 4 to 5 times a year. The U.N. Environment Programme(UNEP) said in a statement that the Lateu settlement has become one of ,if not the first, to be formally moved out of harm’s way as a result of climate change.

The scientists said that seas could rise by almost 3 feet(a meter) by 2100 because of melting ice caps and warming linked to a build-up of heat-trapping gases given off by burning fuels in power plants, factories and cars.

      Pacific Islanders are among those most at risk. Off  Papua New Guinea, about 2000 people on the Cantaret Islands are planning to move to nearly Bougainville island, four hours’ boat ride to the southwest. Two uninhabited         Kiribati island, Tebua Tarawa and Abanuea, disappeared underwater in 1999.

1. The purpose of the 189-nation conference in Montreal is to________________.

A. discuss how to settle the people of Lateu        

B. discuss how to deal with the global warming

C. offer help to the Pacific Islanders             

D. find ways to control the pollution in the world

2. Bougainville island _____________________.

A. is uninhabited                 

B. has disappeared underwater

C.is higher than the Cantaret islands  

D. is four hours’ walk from the Cantaret Islands

3. The inhabitants in the Lateu settlement ___________________.

A. had to move to higher ground in the same island 

B. had to move to another higher island

C. are planning to move to nearby Bougainville island

D. were forced to plant many coconut palms

4. Which of the following is the best title?

A. The global warming

B. Two uninhabited islands

C. Pacific Islanders most at risk

D. Pacific Islanders move to escape global warming

CHRISTMAS ISLAND, AUSTRALIA

Why here: The name just works: Christmas on Christmas Island (there’s also a Christmas Island in the Kiribati nation). And if you don’t like to make a big deal about the holidays, you won’t have to, because the majority of residents on Christmas Island are Chinese and Malay.

Activities: Visit with Santa, who arrives by fire truck down the main street. Then suit yourself up and dive into the Indian Ocean to see whale sharks.

Contact: Christmas Island Tourism Association, www.christmas.net.au.

BURGH ISLAND

Why here: It’s a sort of Dickensian. Cross by sea tractor and go back to the life in the 1920s and the 1930s.

Activities: Sing carols (颂歌) by candlelight in the 14th-century Pilchard Inn. Watch black-and-white movies in the cinema club over cocktails and mince pies. Then Charleston the night away at a Boxing Day (Dec.26) dinner dance.

Contact: Burgh Island, www.burghisland.com. Fees start at $355 per night per person, including breakfast and dinner. A supplement is added during holidays.

CORSICA

Why here: Corsicans worship the typical holiday symbol: the chestnut (栗子). Drink chestnut beer, eat chestnut polenta and walk through a chestnut-tree forest.

Activities: Attend a Christmas Mass (弥撒) in the church where Napoleon was baptized (给……施行洗礼). Toast the season with champagne.

Contact: Kalliste Tours, 831-438-0907, www.kallistetours.com. The Corsica Christmas tour is $5,980 per person, Dec.20-26.

CRUISING THE SOUTH POLE

Why here: Icebergs, penguins… The whole idea of a white Christmas doesn’t get better than this.

Activities: Explore the Weddell Sea, and on Paulet Island marvel at the penguin colony.

Contact: Expedition Trips, 877-412-8527, www.expeditiontrips.com. The cruise starts at $5,990 per person for the 12-day trip, departing Ushuaia, Argentina, on Dec.22.

60. What kind of writing do you think this passage is?

A. An introduction to several famous places.

B. An advertisement for some traveling places.

C. A text taken from a geography book.

D. A programme list for the radio broadcasting.

61. The reason why you choose CHRISTMAS ISLAND, AUSTRALIA is that________.

A. you can spend Christmas on this island with a nostalgic (怀旧的) meaning

B. you can go back to the 1920s and the 1930s

C. you can drink chestnut beer and walk through a chestnut-tree forest

D. you can enjoy the sight of icebergs, penguins in the South Pole

62. If you go to CORSICA, which of the following activities can you do?

A. Sing songs by candlelight in the 14th-century bar.

B. Suit yourself up and dive into the Indian Ocean to see whale sharks.

C. Go to the church where Napoleon was baptized.

D. Explore the Weddell Sea, and on Paulet Island marvel at the penguin colony.

63. If you and your parents stay on BURGH ISLAND for three days, how much will you three spend at least?

A. $3,195.                   B. $5,999.            C. $5,980      .             D. $355.

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