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托福阅读历年真题精选13

中华考试网   2011-11-02   【

Question 20-30          

        It is estimated that over 99 percent of all species that ever existed have become

extinct. What causes extinction? When a species is no longer adapted to a changed

environment, it may perish. The exact causes of a species’ death vary from situation

Line  to situation. Rapid ecological change may render an environment hostile to a species.

For example, temperatures may change and a species may not be able to adapt. Food

Resources may be affected by environmental changes, which will then cause problems

For a species requiring these resources. Other species may become better adapted to an

Environment, resulting in competition and, ultimately, in the death of a species.

  The fossil record reveals that extinction has occurred throughout the history of Earth.

(10) Recent analyses have also revealed that on some occasions many species became extinct

    at the same time—a mass extinction. One of the best-known examples of mass extinction

    occurred 65 million years ago with the demise of dinosaurs and many other forms of life.

    Perhaps the largest mass extinction was the one that occurred 225 million years ago,

    When approximately 95 percent of all species died, Mass extinctions can be caused by

(15) a relatively rapid change in the environment and can be worsened by the close

    interrelationship of many species. If, for example, something were to happen to destroy

    much of the plankton in the oceans, then the oxygen content of Earth would drop,

    affection even organisms not living in the oceans. Such a change would probably lead to a mass extinction.

One interesting, and controversial, finding is that extinctions during the past 250

    Million years have tended to be more intense every 26 million years. This periodic

extinction might be due to intersection of the Earth’s orbit with a cloud of comets, but

this theory is purely speculative. Some researchers have also speculated tat extinction

may often be random. That is, certain species may be eliminated and others may survive

(25) for no particular reason. A species’ survival may have nothing to do with its ability or

inability to adapt. If so, some of evolutionary history may reflect a sequence of essentially

random events.

 

 


20. The word “it” in line 3 refers to

   (A) environment

   (B) species

   (C) extinction

   (D) 99 percent

21. The word “ultimately” in line 8 is closest in meaning to

   (A) exceptionally

   (B) dramatically

   (C) eventually

   (D) unfortunately

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