托福阅读新真经模考三

分享小红书,免费领会员
Font Size: 默认
  • Font Size:默认
  • Font Size:14px
  • Font Size:20px
  • Font Size:16px
  • Font Size:18px

Question 10 of 10

收藏本题
Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points.

Answer Chiose:

A. It is estimated that there have been 40,000 species of insects throughout the history of animal evolution and that only a small portion of them have survived to this date.

B. The richest known deposit of fossil insects that were not preserved in amber is in the Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone in Bavaria, where complete examples of the most primitive dragonflies were found.

C. The fossil record shows that in the Carboniferous period wingless insects became smaller and smaller while the typical wingspan of winged insects reached 70cm before it began to decline again.

D. The best records of ancient insects come from later fossil insects in amber since the fossils in sedimentary rocks, which are much earlier,generally comprise only fragments.

E. Fossil insects are divided into those without wings, which include the most primitive insects, and those with wings.

F. The oldest known fossil insect is around 400 million years old, and fossils of winged insects date from the mid Carboniferous, but fossils of the earliest winged and wingless insects have not been found.

Early insects are not very well represented in the fossil record except for those that lived in a few specific times and places.

我的答案:AEF 正确答案:DEF

本题用时7s
  • 官方解析
  • 网友贡献解析
  • 题目讨论
  • 标签
    0 感谢 0 不懂
    解析


    【答案】DEF

    【题型】文章内容小结题

    【解析】根据文章标题和黑体句,整篇文章的重点讲述的是通过早期昆虫在化石记录中的呈现来研究古代的昆虫。第一段主要讲到了琥珀的保存很完整。第二段提到了琥珀和其他岩石保存两种情况。第三段讲到昆虫可以被分为有翅和无翅动物。第四段说到无翅动物的起源需要更多研究。最后一段讲的是有翅动物的研究。

    选项A错误,第一段原文未提及40,000昆虫物种里只有一小部分活到了现在。

    选项B错误,Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone在第二段最后提到,但原文未提及 the richest,the most primitive dragonflies,注意绝对词易错。

    选项C错误,与原文最后一段有关,但原文未提及无翅昆虫变得越来越小,也没有说有翅动物的翅膀长到70cm “...before it began to decline again”。

    选项D正确,原文第一段以及第二段的前半都体现了琥珀的好处,前面第四题也涉及了保存最完整的化石出现的时间。

    选项E正确,对应原文第三段以及前面第五题内容,并且在第四段也提到了最古老的无翅昆虫。

    选项F正确,对应原文第四段和第五段的内容。

    综上答案为DEF。

  • 题目讨论

    如果对题目有疑问,欢迎来提出你的问题,热心的小伙伴会帮你解答。

译文
Understanding Insects through Fossils

Although it has been estimated that insects account for roughly one-third of all animal species alive today, insects are, on the whole, poorly represented in the available fossil record, where many species are known from just a single specimen, and a high proportion of fossil insects come from exceptional fossil deposits that are sporadically distributed in time and space. Nonetheless, about 40,000 species of insects have been described as fossils, with many more awaiting description. Foremost among insect-rich deposits are ambers in which complete external preservation of insects is routine. Amber is the fossilized resin of a few particular kinds of trees. Oozing out of the bark, this resin had the ability to trap and surround insects, as well as other small animals, protecting them from the normal processes of organic decay as it hardened into transparent, yellow or orange amber. The chemical process of "amberization" could take up to 10million years. During this time, it was common for amber initially buried in the soil to be washed out by rivers and redeposited in the sea.

/

Although the oldest amber comes from the Carboniferous period (360-290 million years ago), the great majority of amber deposits were formed between the start of the Cretaceous period(146 million years ago)and the present. They provide priceless windows on the insects and other small animals living at the time in the forests where amber-producing trees grew. Elsewhere in the fossil record, insects can be found in fine-grained sedimentary rocks, such as clays and silts deposited in freshwater lakes and sluggish rivers. Unlike the insects in amber, these fossils generally comprise only fragments, particularly of wings or wing cases, although more complete examples can be found, such as the dragonflies of the famous Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone of Bavaria.

The fossil record describes a multiplicity of insects that scientists have grouped according to their features. The most basic categorization of insects is into a primitive group without wings, called the Apterygota, and the winged Pterygota. Surviving apterygotes include the springtails and silverfish. They are now relatively rare, comprising less than 1 percent of all insect species. Pterygotes are divided into those with wings that cannot be folded, which are called the Palaeoptera, and a larger, more advanced group, the Neoptera, capable of folding their wings close to the body. Mayflies, dragonflies and damselflies are all palaeopteran insects, while the neopterans include locusts, butterflies, and wasps.

In spite of its imperfection, the fossil record holds a lot of useful information about the times of origination of insect groups that are alive today. Primitive wingless insects-the apterygotes-appear to have undergone an initial diversification during the Devonian period (416-359 million years ago), possibly even the Silurian period (444-416 million years ago). Unfortunately, however, relatively few fossil insects of this age are known and there is a great need for further discoveries. The oldest known fossil insect is currently Rhyniognatha hirsti from the early Devonian fossils in Scotland. However, this species, preserved in sinter (mineral sediment) from an ancient hot water spring that was active between 400 and 412 million years ago, exhibits some advanced characteristic, implying that there are more primitive, older insects still to be discovered.

Fossil insects with preserved wings (Pterygota)first occur in the mid Carboniferous. The evolution of wings was accompanied by an increase in maximum body size. A remarkable dragonfly called Meganeura with a wingspan approaching 70 cm has been described from the late Carboniferous. This inhabitant of the forests is one of the largest insects ever to have lived. The huge size of Meganeura has led to speculations about the composition of the atmosphere at the time, the powered flight of such a large insect perhaps demanding an atmosphere containing higher levels of oxygen than that of the present day. Unfortunately, the fragmentary insect fossil record sheds little light on the origin of flight, as the oldest winged insects already had fully formed wings.