首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext] Good afternoon, folks. In today’s lecture, we talk about the
[originaltext] Good afternoon, folks. In today’s lecture, we talk about the
游客
2023-12-21
24
管理
问题
Good afternoon, folks. In today’s lecture, we talk about the dinosaurs. One of the greatest mysteries about the dinosaurs is why they died out suddenly at the end of the Cretaceous Period 65 million years ago. A number of theories have been suggested to account for this mass extinction. The most popular theory is that a comet or meteorite hit the Earth and exploded with a terrific force, throwing up a dust cloud that blocked out the sun. Suddenly, it gets cold everywhere, and everyone dies. Nevertheless, I think this theory doesn’t work. Because it completely ignores most of what is happening on land. If you want to study dinosaurs and understand them, you’ve got to think about frogs and turtles and salamanders and mammals, too. You can’t take dinosaurs out of context. All the big animals were dinosaurs; that’s true. But most animals aren’t big. Go to the Amazon rain forest, or even a forest in New Jersey, and you’ll find that most of the animals there are small. If you exploded a nuclear bomb right now over Brazil blocking the sunlight and chilling the Amazon rain forest, who would die first? The big deer and jaguars or the little frogs? Frogs should die first, because they are the most delicate creatures in any ecosystem; their blood is in intimate contact with the water they live in. Also, a tropical frog exposed to a chill can’t hibernate, so it dies. A big animal, such as a deer or elephant, can stand a major chill and can move to another area. But have you ever heard of frog extinctions at the end of the Cretaceous Period? No. That’s because no frogs died out. No turtles or salamanders died out. None of these delicate animals, with no defense at all against a sudden chill, died out. But dinosaurs—the biggest, most active animals that should take weeks to kill—did die. This is true of every major extinction that has ever hit the Earth. Not so long ago, there were woolly mammoths and saber-toothed cats in Chicago. There were beavers the size of Buicks all over North America. They disappeared about 10,000 years ago So you may ask: what caused those mass extinctions? Well, it is very hard to come up with a theory that will kill big animals and leave little ones alone. The one thing that would do it is disease. This is a theory developed by American paleontologist Henry Osborn in 1899. He pointed out that when big animals travel, they’ll spread dozens of diseases and disrupt the ecology. Whenever we humans have brought animals from one continent to another, bad things happen. Someone brought starlings from England to North America, and we have a starling problem. Introduce foreign animals and they run amuck. They do not have natural predators and also they spread disease. Whenever there was a mass extinction on land, there were land bridges connecting the continents and big animals moving across them. During most of the history of life, broad oceans have separated the continents. But, periodically, those ocean barriers get drained away and animals can move. Big animals travel very easily. Give an elephant a land bridge and the population will spread at least 1,600 kilometers in two years. Little animals don’t move nearly as fast. It takes a long time for the population of a snake, salamander, or frog to spread. Osborn pointed out that if big animals move across land bridges and start spreading, you’re going to have extinctions caused by disease or disruptions to the ecosystem. There is no way to prevent it. So I like Osborn’s theory. It’s based in ecological reality. We know that foreign animals always cause disaster.
Question No. 16 What is the most popular theory about the dinosaurs’ extinction?
Question No. 17 Why are frogs the most delicate creatures in an ecosystem?
Question No. 18 What is the theory developed by American paleontologist Henry Osborn in 1899?
Question No. 19 Which of the following is NOT regarded as a major extinction of species?
Question No. 20 According to the speaker, what is essential in the spread of diseases by big animals?
选项
A、Big animals usually could not survive little ones in major extinctions.
B、It is a bad thing that we humans have brought animals from place to place.
C、The introduction of foreign animals will spread diseases to us humans.
D、The travel of big animals will spread diseases and disrupt the ecosystem.
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3293535.html
相关试题推荐
Passage1[originaltext]世界杯足球赛今年将在巴西举行。今后几个星期,全世界几十亿人都将聚精会神地关注世界杯比赛。足球是
Passage1[br][originaltext]Therearemorethanfivethousandlanguagessp
Passage1[br][originaltext]我很高兴参加亚洲发展论坛首次年会,与大家共同探讨未来5年亚洲区域合作与发展的问题。
Passage1[originaltext]我很高兴参加亚洲发展论坛首次年会,与大家共同探讨未来5年亚洲区域合作与发展的问题。亚洲是地球上
Passage1[br][originaltext]女士们,先生们:大家好!秋高气爽、月色迷人。今天我们裕华建设有限公司在这里隆重举行成立二十周
Passage1[originaltext]女士们,先生们:大家好!秋高气爽、月色迷人。今天我们裕华建设有限公司在这里隆重举行成立二十周年庆典。
Passage1[br][originaltext]Well,yesterdaywetalkedaboutlong-termtrad
Passage1[originaltext]中英两国都是历史文化大国,都为人类的文明进步作出了伟大贡献。博大精深、辉煌灿烂的中华文化是世界文明的瑰宝。
Passage1[br][originaltext]Allgirls,andnotjustthesportyones,should
Passage1[originaltext]Allgirls,andnotjustthesportyones,shouldtake
随机试题
A、Theyarenotdevotedtotheirwork.B、Theydon’ttaketheirstudentsseriously
Mostyoungpeopletodayare,intheeyesoftheoldergeneration,selfishalmost
Whatpersonalqualitiesaredesirableinateacher?Probablynotwopeoplew
TheAmericanWorkplaceIsBroken.Here’sHowWeCanStartFixingIt.
档案馆对寄存档案的公布和利用,应征得()的同意。A.档案形成者 B.档案所有
共用题干 HackThefirstbig-namehackersinc
患者女性,65岁。近来出现头昏、乏力,易疲倦、活动后气促,听诊发现心音脱漏,脉搏
从理论上讲,联合成本的概念是( )。 A.当生产某一种产品的同时,导致生产
企业首席代表由()担任或由其书面委托的其他管理人员担任。A.法定代表人 B.
关于施工现场动火审批的说法,正确的是()。A.一级动火作业应编制防火安全技术措施
最新回复
(
0
)