职称英语理工类a级补全短文.doc
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1、四、补全短文(一)Mobile phones(移动电话)Mobile phones should carry a label if they proved to be a dangerous source of radiation, according to Robert Bell, a scientist. And no more mobile phone transmitter towers should be built until the long-term health effects of the electromagnetic radiation they emit are sc
2、ientifically evaluated, he said. Nobodys going to drop dead overnight but we should be asking for more scientific information, Robert Bell said at a conference on the health effects of low-level radiation(1)A report widely circulated among the public says that up to now scientists do not really know
3、 enough to guarantee there are no ill-effects on humans from electromagnetic radiation. According to Robert Bell, there are 3. 3 million mobile phones in Australia alone and they are increasing by 2,000 a day(2) AS well, there are 2,000 transmitter towers around Australia, many in high density resid
4、ential areas. (3) The electromagnetic radiation emitted from these towers may have already produced some harmful effects on the health of the residents nearby.Robert Bell suggests that until more research is completed the Government should ban construction of phone towers from within a 500 metre rad
5、ius of school grounds, child care centres, hospitals, sports playing fields and residential areas with a high percentage of children(4) He adds that there is also evidence that if cancer sufferers are subjected to electromagnetic waves the growth rate of the disease accelerates.(5)According to Rober
6、t Bell, it is reasonable for the major telephone companies to fund it. Besides, he also urges the Government to set up a wide-ranging inquiry into possible health effects. A He says there is emerging evidence that children absorb low-level radiation at a rate more than three times that of adults. B
7、By the year 20004 it is estimated that Australia will have 8 million mobile phones: nearly one for every two people: C If mobile phones are found to be dangerous, they should carry a warning label until proper shields can be devised, he said.D Then who finances the research? E For example, Telstra,
8、Optus and Vodaphone build their towers where it is geographically suit-able to them and disregard the need of the community. F The conclusion is that mobile phones brings more harm than benefit(C、B、E、A、D)(二)The worlds longest bridge(世界上最长的桥)Rumor has it that a legendary six-headed monster lurks in t
9、he deep waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea between Italy and the island of Sicily.(1)When completed in 2010, the worlds longest bridge will weigh nearly 300,000 tons - equivalent to the iceberg that sank the Titanic and stretch 5 kilometers long. Thats nearly 50 percent longer than any other bridge ever b
10、uilt, says structural engineer Shane Rixon.(2)Theyre suspension bridges, massive structures built to span vast water channels or. A suspension bridge needs just two towers to shoulder the structures mammoth weight, thanks to hefty supporting cables slung between the towers and anchored firmly in dee
11、p pools of cement at each end of the bridge. The Messina Strait Bridge will have two 54,100-ton towers, which will support most of the bridges load. The beefy cables of the bridge, each 1. 2 meter in diameter, will hold up the longest and widest bridge deck ever built.When construction begins on the
12、 Messina Strait Bridge in 2005, the first job will be to erect370 meter-tall steel towers(3)Getting these cables up will be something. Its not just their, length - totally 5. 3 kilometers but their weight(4)After lowering vertical suspender cables from the main cables, builders will erect a 60-me-wi
13、de 54,630-ton steel roadway, or deck - wide enough to accommodate 12 lanes of traffic. decks weight will pull down on the cables with a force of 70,500 tons. In return, the cables yank up against their firmly rooted anchors with a force of 139,000 tons - equivalent to the weight of about 100,000 car
14、s. Those anchors are essential(5)A Some environmentalists are against the project on biological grounds. B What do the worlds longest bridges have in common?C If true, one day you might spy the beast while zipping across the Messina StraitBridge.D Theyre what will keep the bridge from going anywhere
15、. E The second job will be to pull two sets of steel cables across the strait, each set being a bundle of 44,352 individual steel wires. F They will tip up the scales at 166,500 tons - more than half the bridges total mass.(C、B、E、F、D)(三)Reinventing the table(重新发明元素周期表)An earth scientist has rejigged
16、 the periodic table to make chemistry simpler to teach to students. (1) But Bruce Railsback from the University of Georgia says he is the first to create a table that breaks with tradition and shows the ions of each element rather than just the elements themselves.I got tired of breaking my arms try
17、ing to explain the periodic table to earth students, he says, criss-crossing his hands in the air and pointing to different bits of a traditional table.(2)But he has added contour lines to charge density, helping to explain which ions react with which.Geochemists just want an intuitive sense of what
18、s going on with the elements, says Albert from the University of Cambridge.(3) (4)He explains that sulphur, for example, shows up in three different spots - one for sulphide, which is found in minerals, one for sulphite, and one for sulphate, which is found in sea salt, for instance.He has also incl
19、uded symbols to show which ions are nutrients, and which are common in soil or water.(5)A There have been many attempts to redesign the periodic table since Dmitri Mendeleev drew it up in 1871.B Railsback has still ordered the elements according to the number of protons they have.C I imagine this wo
20、uld be good for undergraduates.D Railsback has listed some elements more than once.E And the size of elements symbol reflects how much of it is found in the Earths crust.F The traditional periodic table was well drawn.(A、B、C、D、E)(四)The Bilingual Brain(双语大脑)A But their use of Brocas area was differen
21、t.B One group consisted of those who had learned a second language as children.C How does Hirsch explain this difference?D We use special parts of the brain for language learning.E And that is very different from learning a language in a high school or college class.F Their work led to an important
22、discovery.(F、B、A、C、E)(五)A Record-Breaking Rover NASAs Mars rover Opportunity has boldly gone where no rover has gone beforeat least in terms of distance. _1_On July 27, after years of moving about on Martian ground, the golf-cart-sized Opportunity had driven more than 24 miles, beating the previous
23、record holdera Soviet rover sent to the moon in 1973. “This is so remarkable considering Opportunity was intended to drive about 1 kilometer and was never designed for distance,” says John Callas, the Mars Exploration Rover Project Manager. _2_ “But what is really importantly is not how many miles t
24、he rover has racked up, but how much exploration and discovery we have accomplished over that distance.” OPPORTUNITY The solar-powered Opportunity and its twin rover, Spirit, landed on Mars 10 years ago on a mission expected to last 3 months. _3_Spirit stopped communicating with Earth in March 2010,
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