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Question 7 of 10

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According to paragraph 6, what happens when the trade winds weaken and are replaced by west winds?

A. The warming period comes to an end.

B. Warm water is pushed away from South America.

C. The counter current gets stronger.

D. Broad areas of the tropical Pacific get cooler

Paragraph 6 is marked with []

我的答案 B 正确答案 C

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    解析

    【题型】事实信息题

    【解析】题干问的是“当信风减弱并被西风取代时会发生什么?” 可以定位到原文第二句,继续往后寻找答案,后面说到 “西风加强了逆流,导致暖水向东流向南美洲,覆盖热带太平洋的广大地区。” 这部分信息可以对应选项C “逆流加强了。”

    选项A,温暖期结束,原文在后文说到“在可能持续一至两年的升温期结束时,东太平洋上空的大气压力逆转并开始上升,而西太平洋上空则下降。” 与题干问的内容无关。

    选项B,暖水被推离南美洲,与原文说的方向相反。

    选项D,热带太平洋的广大地区变得凉爽,原文未提及。

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译文
El Nino and the Southern Oscillation

Between the ocean surface and the atmosphere, there is an exchange of heat and moisture that depends, in part, on temperature differences between water and air. Even a relatively small change in surface ocean temperatures could modify atmospheric circulations and have far-reaching effects on global weather patterns.

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Along the west coast of South America, where the cool Peru Current sweeps northward, southerly winds promote upwelling (rising to the surface and flowing outward ) of cold, nutrient-rich water that gives rise to large fish populations, especially anchovies. The abundance of fish supports a large population of seabirds whose droppings (ale guano) produce huge phosphate-rich deposits that support the fertilizer industry. Near the end of the calendar year, a warm current of nutrient-poor tropical water often moves southward, replacing the cold, nutrient-rich surface water.

In most years, the warming lasts for only a few weeks to a month or more, after which weather patterns usually return to normal and fishing improves. However, when conditions last for many months, and a more extensive ocean warming occurs, the economic results can be catastrophic. This extremely warm episode, which occurs at irregular intervals of two to seven years and covers a large area of the tropical Pacific Ocean, is now referred to as a major El Nino event, or simply El Nino.

During a major El Nino event, large numbers of fish and marine plants may die. Dead fish and birds may litter the water and beaches of Peru; their decomposing bodies reduce the water's oxygen supply, which leads to the bacterial production of huge amounts of hydrogen sulfide. The El Nino of 1972-1973 reduced the annual Peruvian anchovy catch from 10.3 million metric tons in 1971 to 4.6 million metric tons in 1972. Since much of the harvest of this fish is converted into fish meal and exported for use in feeding livestock and poultry, the world's meal production in 1972 was greatly reduced. Countries such as the United States that rely on meal for animal feed had to use soybeans as an alternative. This raised poultry prices in the United States by more than 40 percent.

Why does the ocean become so warm over the eastern tropical Pacific? Normally in the tropical Pacific Ocean, there are the trades-persistent winds that blow westward from a region of higher pressure over the eastern Pacific toward a region of lower pressure centered near Indonesia. The trades create upwelling that brings cold water to the surface. As this water moves westward, it is heated by sunlight and the atmosphere. Consequently, in the Pacific Ocean, surface water along the equator usually is cool in the east and warm in the west. In addition, the dragging of surface water by the trades raises the sea level in the western Pacific and lowers it in the eastern Pacific, which produces a thick layer of warm water over the tropical western Pacific Ocean and a weak ocean current (called the counter current) that flows slowly eastward toward South America.

Every few years, the surface atmospheric pressure patterns break down, as air pressure rises over the region of the western Pacific and falls over the eastern Pacific. This change in pressure weakens the trades, and, during strong pressure reversals, east winds are replaced by west winds. The west winds strengthen the counter current, causing warm water to head eastward toward South America over broad areas of the tropical Pacific. Toward the end of the warming period, which may last between one and two years, atmospheric pressure over the eastern Pacific reverses and begins to rise, whereas, over the western Pacific, it falls. This seesaw pattern of reversing surface air pressure at opposite ends of the Pacific Ocean is called the Southern Oscillation. Because the pressure reversals and ocean warming are more or less simultaneous, scientists call this phenomenon the El Nino Southern Oscillation, or ENSO for short. Although most ENSO episodes follow similar evolution, each event has its own personality, differing in both strength and behavior.