首页
登录
职称英语
(1) The concern throughout the world in 1988 for those three whales that wer
(1) The concern throughout the world in 1988 for those three whales that wer
游客
2023-12-03
55
管理
问题
(1) The concern throughout the world in 1988 for those three whales that were locked in the Arctic ice was dramatic proof that whales, several species of which face extinction, have become subjects of considerable sympathy.
(2) These are the recorded voices of whales. These monstrous creatures have been trumpeting their songs, one to another, in the world’s oceans since the daw of time, while overhead, great empires and civilizations have come and gone. Now, their time of decline has come. It began a long time ago.
(3) Four-thousand-year-old rock carvings show that the people who lived in what is now Norway were probably the first to seek out and kill whales in the sea. By around 890 AD, 3,000 years later, the practice had spread to the Basque people of France and Spain, who hunted whales from boats in the Bay of Biscay. In the centuries that followed, Whaling became an important industry in Denmark, England, Germany, the Netherlands, and, finally, in what would become America.
(4) Whaling went into dramatic decline, beginning around 1900. Today, whales are hunted commercially only by Norway, Iceland and Japan. The world’s fascination with them, however, is at an all-time high, because so few of them are left, given their tragic history.
(5) Richard Ellis writes about whales, takes pictures of whales in the open sea, and sketches whales stranded on the beach. He says it’s a 20-year obsession that began in the mid-1960s, when he designed a model of a great blue for the Museum of Natural History in New York "As I began to do the research, I realized that nobody knew anything about whales. And I couldn’t really find any pictures of what they looked like: all I could find was pictures of dead whales. And I became very excited at the prospect of doing what seemed to be original research on something that was so peculiar, which was the largest animal that has ever lived on earth."
(6) So large, he discovered that the largest dinosaur weighed only half as much as the female blue whale. As he continued his research, he boarded scientific vessels, dove with whales in the Pacific, and even watched whales die at the hands of modern explosive-tipped harpoons. His sketches appeared in magazines and encyclopedias and at the center of what was then the beginning of a movement to save the whales.
(7) "I was one of those people who used to stand on street corners and ask for people to sign petitions, which at that time were directed towards the Japanese and the Soviets. Because in that period of time, late 60s and early 70s, the Japanese and the Soviets were killing tens of thousands of sperm, particularly in the North Pacific. And we thought that getting the world’s opinion on paper would make them say, ’Oh look, all these people don’t like what we are doing. We will stop.’ Well, of course, they didn’t stop."
(8) Not at first, commercial whaling peaked in the mid-1960s, with more than 60,000 whales killed each year. The International Whaling Commission, a group of member nations aimed at regulating the industry, began to make recommendations to end commercial whaling entirely. Why kill whales for soap, or fuel or paints and varnishes, even margarine, if we had substitutes for all those products? The seemingly senseless slaughter focused the world’s attention on the whale and consequently the International Whaling Commission or IWC.
(9) "And since it’s said nowhere in the constitution of the IWC that you had to be whaling nation to join, you have countries like Kenya and the Seychelles. Switzerland is a member of the IWC, a country not known for its whaling history. Countries joined because they felt that this was something that needed to be done. "
(10) By 1986, the Commission had passed a moratorium on commercial whaling. But since the organization had no enforcement powers, it could arid can not impose sanctions on violators. Only a few nations, Japan, Iceland, and Norway, continue to hunt whales commercially.
(11) Richard Ellis says there is something magical about this animal caught in the net of life and time, and we must continue to fight to preserve it, because in the end we are really protecting a small part of ourselves and our earth. [br] The International Whaling Commission (IWC) was an organization that _____.
选项
A、a country could join only when being a whaling nation
B、had the right to end commercial whaling entirely
C、collected the world’s opinion to show concerns for whales
D、had no authority for punishing violators
答案
D
解析
第10段第2句提到,IWC没有强迫执行的权力不能对违反者进行制裁,因此可得出答案D。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3239641.html
相关试题推荐
Hawthornegenerallyconcernedhimselfwithsuchissuesas______inhisfictions.A
Allsocialanimalscommunicatewitheachother,frombeesandantstowhales
Allsocialanimalscommunicatewitheachother,frombeesandantstowhales
Allsocialanimalscommunicatewitheachother,frombeesandantstowhales
Allsocialanimalscommunicatewitheachother,frombeesandantstowhales
Allsocialanimalscommunicatewitheachother,frombeesandantstowhales
______referstoabranchoflinguisticsconcernedwiththeuseoflanguageinso
Whatislikelytobethemajorconcernoftheworktheyaretalkingabout?[br]
Whatislikelytobethemajorconcernoftheworktheyaretalkingabout?[br]
Whatislikelytobethemajorconcernoftheworktheyaretalkingabout?[orig
随机试题
Youarerequiredtowriteabout200wordsonthefollowingtopic:"Isitbetter
【B1】[br]【B9】A、formationsB、classesC、termsD、reactionsB词义理解。formation,构成;term
A.与乙酰胆碱争夺M型受体 B.与乙酰胆碱争夺N型受体 C.抑制乙酰胆碱的作
网织红细胞绝对值减低,最常见于A.缺铁性贫血 B.,再生障碍性贫血 C.阵发
(2017年真题)信息披露指引由()制定。A.中国证券业协会 B.中国证
A.长春新碱 B.环磷酰胺 C.羟基脲 D.5-氟尿嘧啶 E.雌激素通过
批发和零售业总产出等于其主营业务收入。()
按照艾里克森的发展理论,以建立自我同一性作为主要发展任务的年龄阶段是A.6~12
下面各种相关类型中属于品质相关的有A.四分相关 B.列联表相关 C.系数
“(销售收入-销售成本)/销售收入”这一指标可以反映每1元销售收入所带来的净利
最新回复
(
0
)