首页
登录
职称英语
IMPACTS AND MASS EXTINCTIONS (1) Met
IMPACTS AND MASS EXTINCTIONS (1) Met
游客
2025-02-03
35
管理
问题
IMPACTS AND MASS EXTINCTIONS
(1) Meteorites and impact craters bear witness to the fact that large impacts occasionally occur on Earth. Barringer Meteor Crater in the northern Arizona desert of the United States formed about 50,000 years ago when a metallic impactor roughly 50 meters across crashed to Earth with the explosive power of a 20-megaton hydrogen bomb. Although the crater is only slightly more than one kilometer across, an area covering hundreds of square kilometers was probably battered by the blast and ejecta—the debris ejected or displaced during the formation of an impact crater. Far bigger impacts have occurred, sometimes with
catastrophic
consequences for life on Earth.
(2) While collecting geological samples in Italy in 1978, the father-son team of Luis and Walter Alvarez discovered a thin layer of dark sediment that had apparently been deposited 65 million years ago—at about the same time that the dinosaurs and many other organisms suddenly became extinct. Subsequent studies found similar sediment deposited at the same time at many sites around the world. Careful analysis showed this worldwide sediment layer to be rich in iridium, an element that is rare on Earth’s surface. But iridium is common in primitive meteorites, which led the Alvarezes to a stunning conclusion: the extinction of the dinosaurs was caused by the impact of an asteroid or comet. This conclusion was not immediately accepted and still generates some controversy, but it now seems clear that a major impact
coincided with
the death of the dinosaurs. While the dinosaurs were the most famous victims of this mass extinction, it seems that up to 99 percent of all living things were killed and that 75 percent of all species living on Earth were wiped out at that time.
(3) How could an impact lead to mass extinction? The amount of iridium deposited worldwide suggests that the impactor must have been about 10 kilometers across. After a decade-long search, scientists identified what appears to be the impact crater from the event. Located off the coast of Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula, it is 200 kilometers across, which is close to what one would expect for a 10-kilometer impactor, and dates to 65 million years ago. Further evidence that the Yucatan crater is the right one comes from the distribution of small glassy spheres that formed when the molten impact ejecta solidified as it rained back to Earth. [A] More of these glassy spheres are found in regions near the crater, and careful study of their distribution suggests that the impactor crashed to Earth at a slight angle. [B] These pieces of once molten rock are evidence of an explosion powerful enough to instantly melt bedrock and propel it far from its origin. [C] The impact almost immediately sent a shower of debris raining across much of North and South America and generated huge waves that may have sloshed more than 1,000 kilometers inland. [D] Many North American species thus may have been wiped out shortly after impact. For the rest of the world, death may have come more slowly. Heat from the impact and returning ejecta probably ignited wildfires in forests around the world. Evidence of wildfires is found in the large amount of soot (a black powdery form of carbon produced when coal, wood, or oil is burned) that is also present in the iridium-rich sediment from 65 million years ago. The impact also sent huge quantities of dust high into the stratosphere, where it remained for several years, blocking out sunlight, cooling the surface, and affecting atmospheric chemistry. Plants died for lack of sunlight, and effects
propagated
throughout the food chain.
(4) Perhaps the most, astonishing fact is not that 75 percent of all species died, but that 25 percent survived. Among the survivors were a few small, rodent-like mammals. These mammals may have survived because they lived in underground burrows and managed to store enough food to outlast the long spell of cold, dark days. Small mammals had first arisen at about the same time as the dinosaurs, more than 100 million years earlier. But the sudden disappearance of the dominant dinosaurs made these mammals dominant. [br] Which of the following statements about scientists’ theories on the extinction of the dinosaurs can be inferred from paragraph 2?
选项
A、Some scientists do not believe that an asteroid or comet impact killed the dinosaurs.
B、Some scientists think that iridium was abundant on Earth before the extinction of the dinosaurs.
C、Some scientists doubt that all of the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago.
D、Some scientists believe that the dinosaurs became extinct only after the plants and animals they ate disappeared.
答案
A
解析
本题属于推论题,要求考生根据第2段推断出与科学家们关于恐龙灭绝的理论相符的论述。第2段第5句提到,阿尔瓦雷茨父子提出的天体撞击理论并没有立即被接受,并且直至今日,这理论仍引发着争议,对应A项“一些科学家认为不是一颗小行星或彗星的撞击导致恐龙灭绝”。B项“一些科学家认为,在恐龙灭绝前,地球上就富含铱元素”和D项“一些科学家认为,恐龙是在它们食用的动植物消失后灭绝的”均没有依据。C项“一些科学家对恐龙是在6,500万年前灭绝的这个说法提出质疑。”由第2段第5句可知,科学家们质疑的是恐龙灭绝的原因,而不是时间。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3941757.html
相关试题推荐
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
IMPACTSANDMASSEXTINCTIONS(1)Met
随机试题
根据《民事诉讼法》及相关规定,下列哪些情况下,当事人可以申请审判人员回避?(
IoncewenttoatowninthenorthofEn
混凝土浇水养护的时间:对采用硅酸盐水泥、普通硅酸盐水泥或矿渣硅酸盐水泥拌制的混凝
依据行为改变的阶段理论,健康管理师在第4、5阶段的最主要工作是()A.重点促使
(2016年)指数型消极投资策略的核心思想是()。A.相信市场是有效的 B.相
质量改进的组织有不同的层次,具体可分为()。 A.质量委员会B.质量改进团
对巡逻、门岗等执勤岗位的安全防范服务的要求叙述不正确的是()。A:服从领导,听
下列各句中没有语病,意义明确的是()。A.他很后悔,不该和自己同过患难,共过生死
历史资料研究法的资料来源包括()。A:政府部门B:专业研究机构C:高等学校
慢性活动性胃炎最主要的病因是( )。A.饮食和环境因素 B.自身免疫 C.
最新回复
(
0
)