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1、GWD_RC_改版大全制作者: Hamiton CDGWD-TN-12GWD-TN-28GWD-TN-316GWD-TN-424GWD-TN-531GWD-TN-638GWD-TN-744GWD-TN-853GWD-TN-960GWD-TN-1068GWD-TN-1176GWD-TN-1391GWD-TN-14100GWD-TN-15105GWD-TN-16111GWD-TN-17118GWD-TN-18122GWD-TN-19129GWD-TN-20135GWD-TN-21144GWD-TN-22150GWD-TN-23156GWD-TN-24161GWD-TN-1GWD1-Q4 to Q6
2、: The fields of antebellum (pre-Civil War) political history and womens history use separate sources and focus on separate issues. Political historians, examining sources such as voting records, newspapers, and politicians writings, focus on the emergence in the 1840s of a new “American political na
3、tion,” and since women were neither voters nor politicians, they receive little discussion. Womens historians, meanwhile, have shown little interest in the subject of party politics, instead drawing on personal papers, legal records such as wills, and records of female associations to illuminate wom
4、ens domestic lives, their moral reform activities, and the emergence of the womans rights movement. However, most historians have underestimated the extent and significance of womens political allegiance in the antebellum period. For example, in the presidential election campaigns of the 1840s, the
5、Virginia Whig party strove to win the allegiance of Virginias women by inviting them to rallies and speeches. According to Whig propaganda, women who turned out at the partys rallies gathered information that enabled them to mold party-loyal families, reminded men of moral values that transcended pa
6、rty loyalty, and conferred moral standing on the party. Virginia Democrats, in response, began to make similar appeals to women as well. By the mid-1850s the inclusion of women in the rituals of party politics had become commonplace, and the ideology that justified such inclusion had been assimilate
7、d by the Democrats.-GWD1-Q4:The primary purpose of the passage as a whole is toA. examine the tactics of antebellum political parties with regard to womenB. trace the effect of politics on the emergence of the womans rights movementC. point out a deficiency in the study of a particular historical pe
8、riodD. discuss the ideologies of opposing antebellum political partiesE. contrast the methodologies in two differing fields of historical inquiry-GWD1-Q5:According to the second paragraph of the passage (lines 20-42), Whig propaganda included the assertion thatA. women should enjoy more political ri
9、ghts than they didB. women were the most important influences on political attitudes within a familyC. womens reform activities reminded men of important moral valuesD. womens demonstrations at rallies would influence mens voting behaviorE. womens presence at rallies would enhance the moral standing
10、 of the party-GWD1-Q6:According to the passage, which of the following was true of Virginia Democrats in the mid-1850s?A. They feared that their party was losing its strong moral foundation.B. They believed that the Whigs inclusion of women in party politics had led to the Whigs success in many elec
11、tions.C. They created an ideology that justified the inclusion of women in party politics.D. They wanted to demonstrate that they were in support of the womans rights movement.E. They imitated the Whigs efforts to include women in the rituals of party politics.GWD1-Q9 to Q12: Over the last 150 years
12、, large stretches of salmon habitat have been eliminated by human activity: mining, livestock grazing, timber harvesting, and agriculture as well as recreational and urban development. The numerical effect is obvious: there are fewer salmon in degraded regions than in pristine ones; however, habitat
13、 loss also has the potential to reduce genetic diversity. This is most evident in cases where it results in the extinction of entire salmon populations. Indeed, most analysts believe that some kind of environmental degradation underlies the demise of many extinct salmon populations. Although some ri
14、vers have been recolonized, the unique genes of the original populations have been lost. Large-scale disturbances in one locale also have the potential to alter the genetic structure of populations in neighboring areas, even if those areas have pristine habitats. Why? Although the homing instinct of
15、 salmon to their natal stream is strong, a fraction of the fish returning from the sea (rarely more than 15 percent) stray and spawn in nearby streams. Low levels of straying are crucial, since the process provides a source of novel genes and a mechanism by which a location can be repopulated should
16、 the fish there disappear. Yet high rates of straying can be problematic because misdirected fish may interbreed with the existing stock to such a degree that any local adaptations that are present become diluted. Straying rates remain relatively low when environmental conditions are stable, but can
17、 increase dramatically when streams suffer severe disturbance. The 1980 volcanic eruption of Mount Saint Helens, for example, sent mud and debris into several tributaries of the Columbia River. For the next couple of years, steelhead trout (a species included among the salmonids) returning from the
18、sea to spawn were forced to find alternative streams. As a consequence, their rates of straying, initially 16 percent, rose to more than 40 percent overall. Although no one has quantified changes in the rate of straying as a result of the disturbances caused by humans, there is no reason to suspect
19、that the effect would be qualitatively different than what was seen in the aftermath of the Mount Saint Helens eruption. Such a dramatic increase in straying from damaged areas to more pristine streams results in substantial gene flow, which can in turn lower the overall fitness of subsequent genera
20、tions.-GWD1-Q9:The primary purpose of the passage is toA. argue against a conventional explanation for the extinction of certain salmon populations and suggest an alternativeB. correct a common misunderstanding about the behavior of salmon in response to environmental degradation caused by human act
21、ivityC. compare the effects of human activity on salmon populations with the effects of natural disturbances on salmon populationsD. differentiate the particular effects of various human activities on salmon habitatsE. describe how environmental degradation can cause changes in salmon populations th
22、at extend beyond a numerical reduction-GWD1-Q10:It can be inferred from the passage that the occasional failure of some salmon to return to their natal streams in order to spawn provides a mechanism by whichA. pristine streams that are near polluted streams become polluted themselves B. the particul
23、ar adaptations of a polluted streams salmon population can be preserved without dilutionC. the number of salmon in pristine habitats decreases relative to the number in polluted streamsD. an environmentally degraded stream could be recolonized by new salmon populations should the stream recoverE. th
24、e extinction of the salmon populations that spawn in polluted streams is accelerated-GWD1-Q11:According to the passage, human activity has had which of the following effects on salmon populations?A. An increase in the size of salmon populations in some previously polluted riversB. A decline in the n
25、umber of salmon in some riversC. A decrease in the number straying salmon in some riversD. A decrease in the gene flow between salmon populations that spawn in polluted streams and populations that spawn in pristine streamsE. A decline in the vulnerability of some salmon populations to the effects o
26、f naturally occurring habitat destruction-GWD1-Q12:The author mentions the “aftermath of the Mount Saint Helens eruption” (lines 73-74) most likely in order toA. provide an example of the process that allows the repopulation of rivers whose indigenous salmon population has become extinctB. indicate
27、the extent to which the disturbance of salmon habitat by human activity in one stream might affect the genetic structure of salmon populations elsewhereC. provide a standard of comparison against which the impact of human activity on the gene flow among salmon populations should be measuredD. show h
28、ow salmons homing instinct can be impaired as a result of severe environmental degradation of their natal streamsE. show why straying rates in salmon populations remain generally low except when spawning streams suffer severe environmental disturbance-GWD1-Q25 to Q28: Recently biologists have been i
29、nterested in a tide-associated periodic behavior displayed by the diatom Hantzschia virgata, a microscopic golden-brown alga that inhabits that portion of a shoreline washed by tides (the intertidal zone). Diatoms of this species, sometimes called “commuter” diatoms, remain burrowed in the sand duri
30、ng high tide, and emerge on the sand surface during the daytime low tide. Just before the sand is inundated by the rising tide, the diatoms burrow again. Some scientists hypothesize that commuter diatoms know that it is low tide because they sense an environmental change, such as an alteration in te
31、mperature or a change in pressure caused by tidal movement. However, when diatoms are observed under constant conditions in a laboratory, they still display periodic behavior, continuing to burrow on schedule for several weeks. This indicates that commuter diatoms, rather than relying on environment
32、al cues to keep time, possess an internal pacemaker or biological clock that enables them to anticipate periodic changes in the environment. A commuter diatom has an unusually accurate biological clock, a consequence of the unrelenting environmental pressures to which it is subjected; any diatoms th
33、at do not burrow before the tide arrives are washed away. This is not to suggest that the period of this biological clock is immutably fixed. Biologists have concluded that even though a diatom does not rely on the environment to keep time, environmental factorsincluding changes in the tides hydrost
34、atic pressure, salinity, mechanical agitation, and temperaturecan alter the period of its biological clock according to changes in the tidal cycle. In short, the relation between an organisms biological clock and its environment is similar to that between a wristwatch and its owner: the owner cannot
35、 make the watch run faster or slower, but can reset the hands. However, this relation is complicated in intertidal dwellers such as commuter diatoms by the fact that these organisms are exposed to the solar-day cycle as well as to the tidal cycle, and sometimes display both solar-day and tidal perio
36、ds in a single behavior. Commuter diatoms, for example, emerge only during those low tides that occur during the day.-GWD1-Q25:The passage suggests which of the following about the accuracy of the commuter diatoms biological clock?A. The accuracy of the commuter diatoms biological clock varies accor
37、ding to changes in the tidal cycle.B. The unusual accuracy that characterizes the commuter diatoms biological clock is rare among intertidal species.C. The commuter diatoms biological clock is likely to be more accurate than the biological clock of a species that is subject to less intense environme
38、ntal pressures.D. The commuter diatoms biological clock tends to be more accurate than the biological clocks of most other species because of the consistency of the tidal cycle.E. The accuracy of the commuter diatoms biological clock tends to fluctuate when the diatom is observed under variable labo
39、ratory conditions.-GWD1-Q26:The author of the passage compares the relationship between an organisms biological clock and its environment to the relation between a wristwatch and its owner most probably in order toA. point out a fundamental difference between the function of biological clocks in org
40、anisms and the use of mechanical clocks by humansB. illustrate the way in which the period of an organisms biological clock can be altered by environmental factorsC. suggest that there are important similarities between the biological clock in organisms such as the commuter diatom and the biological
41、 clock in humansD. support an argument regarding the methods used by certain organisms to counteract the influence of the environment on their biological clocksE. question the accuracy of the biological clock in organisms such as the commuter diatom-GWD1-Q27:According to the passage, the periodic be
42、havior displayed by commuter diatoms under constant laboratory conditions is characterized by which of the following?A. Greater unpredictability than the corresponding behavior under natural conditionsB. A consistent periodic schedule in the short termC. No difference over the long term from the cor
43、responding behavior under natural conditionsD. Initial variability caused by the constant conditions of the laboratoryE. Greater sensitivity to environmental factors than is the case under natural conditions-GWD1-Q28:The primary purpose of the passage is toA. dispute the influence of environmental f
44、actors on the tide-associated behavioral rhythms displayed by the diatom Hantzschia virgataB. describe how certain tide-associated behavioral rhythms displayed by the diatom Hantzschia virgata have changed over timeC. compare tide-associated behavioral rhythms to solar-day behavioral rhythms in the
45、diatom Hantzschia virgataD. examine how certain biological and environmental influences affect the tide-associated behavioral rhythms displayed by the diatom Hantzschia virgataE. identify certain environmental factors that limit the effectiveness of the biological clock in the diatom Hantzschia virgata-GWD1-Q35 to Q37: In corporate purchasing, competitive scrutiny is typically limited to suppliers of items that are directly related to end products. With “indirect” purchases (such as com
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