>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Time: 55 minutes (including the reading of the directions). Now set your clock for 55 minutes.>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Question 1——10
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec The word laser was coined as an acronym for Light Amplification by the Stimulated
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Emission of Radiation. Ordinary light, from the Sun or a light bulb, is emitted
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec spontaneously, when atoms or molecules get rid of excess energy by themselves, without
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec any outside intervention . Stimulated emission is different because it occurs when an
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec atom or molecule holding onto excess energy has been stimulated to emit it as light.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Albert Einstein was the first to suggest the existence of stimulated emission in a
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec paper published in 1917. However , for many years physicists thought that atoms and
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec molecules always were much more likely to emit light spontaneously and that stimulated
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec emission thus always would be much weaker. It was not until after the Second World
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec War that physicists began trying to make stimulated emission dominate. They sought
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec ways by which one atom or molecule could stimulate many other to emit light ,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec amplifying it to much higher powers.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec The first to succeed was Charles H.Townes, then at Colombia University in New
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec York . Instead of working with light , however, he worked with microwaves, which have
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec a much longer wavelength, and built a device he called a "maser" for Microwave
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Although he thought of the
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec key idea in 1951, the first maser was not completed until a couple of years later. Before
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec long, many other physicists were building masers and trying to discover how to produce
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec stimulated emission at even shorter wavelength.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec The key concepts emerged about 1957. Townes and Arthur Schawlow, then at Bell
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Telephone Laboratories, wrote a long paper outlining the conditions needed to amplify
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec stimulated emission of visible light waves. At about the same time, similar ideas
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec crystallized in the mind of Gordon Gould, then a 37- year-old graduate student at
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Columbia, who wrote them down in a series of notebooks. Townes and Schawlow
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec published their ideas in a scientific journal, Physical Review Letter, but Gould filed a
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec patent application. Three decades later, people still argue about who deserves the credit
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec for the concept of the laser.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 1. The word "coin" in line 1 could be replaced by
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) created
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) mentioned
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) understood
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) discovered
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 2. The word "intervention" in line 4 can best be replaced by
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) need
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) device
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) influence
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) source
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 3. The word "it" in line 5 refers to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) light bulb
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) energy
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) molecule
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) atom
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 4. Which of the following statements best describes a laser?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) A device for stimulating atoms and molecules to emit light
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) An atom in a high-energy state
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) A technique for destroying atoms or molecules
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) An instrument for measuring light waves
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 5. Why was Towne’s early work with stimulated emission done with microwaves?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) He was not concerned with light amplification
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) It was easier to work with longer wavelengths.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) His partner Schawlow had already begun work on the laser.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec(D) The laser had already been developed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec6. In his research at Columbia University, Charles Townes worked with all of the following EXCEPT
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) stimulated emission
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) microwaves
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) light amplification
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) a maser
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 7.In approximately what year was the first maser built?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) 1917
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) 1951
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) 1953
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) 1957
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 8. The word "emerged" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) increased
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) concluded
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) succeeded
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) appeared
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 9. The word "outlining" in line 21 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) assigning
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) studying
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) checking
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) summarizing
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 10. Why do people still argue about who deserves the credit for the concept of the laser?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) The researchers’ notebooks were lost.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Several people were developing the idea at the same time.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) No one claimed credit for the development until recently.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The work is still incomplete.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Question 11——21
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Panel painting, common in thirteenth -and fourteenth -century Europe , involved a
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec painstaking , laborious process. Wooden planks were joined, covered with gesso to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec prepare the surface for painting , and then polished smooth with special tools. On this
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec perfect surface, the artist would sketch a composition with chalk, refine it with inks,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec and then begin the deliberate process of applying thin layers of egg tempera paint (egg
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec yolk in which pigments are suspended) with small brushes. The successive layering of
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec these meticulously applied paints produced the final, translucent colors.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Backgrounds of gold were made by carefully applying sheets of gold leaf, and then
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec embellishing of decorating the gold leaf by punching
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec it with a metal rod on which a
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec pattern had been embossed. Every step in the process was slow and deliberate . The
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec quick-drying tempera demanded that the artist know exactly where each stroke be
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec placed before the brush met the panel, and it required the use of fine brushes. It was,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec therefore , an ideal technique for emphasizing the hard linear edges and pure, fine areas
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec of color that were so much a part of the overall aesthetic of the time. The notion that an
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec artist could or would dash off an idea in a fit of spontaneous inspiration was
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec completely alien to these deliberately produced works.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Furthermore, making these paintings was so time-consuming that it demanded
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec assistance. All such work was done by collective enterprise in the workshops. The
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec painter or master who is credited with having created painting may have designed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec the work and overseen its production, but it is highly unlikely that the artist’s hand
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec applied every stroke of the brush. More likely, numerous assistants, who had been
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec trained to imitate the artist’s style, applied the paint. The carpenter’s shop probably
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec provided the frame and perhaps supplied the panel, and yet another shop supplied the
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec gold. Thus, not only many hands , but also many shops were involved in the final
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec product.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec In spite of problems with their condition, restoration, and preservation many panel
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec paintings have survived, and today many of them are housed in museum collections
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec11. What aspect of panel paintings does the passage mainly discuss?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Famous examples
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Different styles
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Restoration
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Production
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 12. According to the passage, what does the first step in making a panel painting ?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Mixing the paint
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Preparing the panel
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Buying the gold leaf
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Making ink drawings
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 13. The word "it" in line 4 refers to .
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) chalk
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) composition
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) artist
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) surface
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 14. The word "deliberate" in line 5 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) decisive
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) careful
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) natural
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) unusual
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 15. Which of the following processes produced the translucent colors found on panel paintings? (A) Joining wooden planks to form large sheets
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Polishing the gesso
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Applying many layers of paint
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Covering the background with gold leaf
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 16. What characteristic of tempera paint is mentioned in the passage ?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) It dries quickly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) It is difficut to make
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) It dissolves easily
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) It has to be applied directly to wood
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 17. The word "demanded" in line 17 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) ordered
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) reported
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) required
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) questioned
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 18. The "collective enterprise" mentioned in line 18 includes all of the following EXCEPT
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) supplying the gold leaf
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) building the panels
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) applying the paint
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) selling the painting
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 19. The word "imitate" in line 22 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) copy
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) illustrate
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) promote
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) believe in
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 20. The author mentions all of the following as problems with the survival of panel painting EXCEPT
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) condition
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) theft
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) preservation
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) restoration
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 21. The word "them" in line 27 refers to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) problems
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) condition, restoration, preservation
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) panel paintings
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) museum collections
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&decQuestion 22——32
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Crows are probably the most frequently met and easily identifiable members of the
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec native fauna of the United States . The great number of tales, legends, and myths about
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec these birds indicates that people have been exceptionally interested in them for a long
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec time. On the other hand, when it comes to substantive —— particularly behavioral ——
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec information, crows are less well known than many comparably common species and,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec for that matter, not a few quite uncommon ones: the endangered California condor, to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec cite one obvious example. There are practical reasons for this.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Crows are notoriously poor and aggravating subjects for field research. Keen
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec observers and quick learners, they are astute about the intentions of other creatures,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec including researchers, and adept at avoiding them. Because they are so numerous,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec active, and monochromatic, it is difficult to distinguish one crow from another. Bands,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec radio transmitters, or other identifying devices can be attached to them , but this of
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec course requires catching live crows, who are among the wariest and most untrappable
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec of birds.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Technical difficulties aside , crow research is daunting because the ways of these
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec birds are so complex and various. As preeminent is generalists, members of this species ingeniously exploit a great range of habitats and resources, and they can quickly adjust
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec to changes in their circumstances. Being so educable, individual birds have markedly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec different interests and inclinations, strategies and scams.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec For example, one pet crow
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec learned how to let a dog out of its kennel by pulling the pin on the door. When the dog
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec escaped, the bird went into the kennel and ate its food.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 22.What is the main topic of the passage?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) The ways in which crows differ from other common birds
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) The myths and legends about crows
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) The characteristics that make crows difficult to study
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The existing methods for investigating crow behavior
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 23. According to the first paragraph, what evidence is there that crows have interested people for a long time?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) The large number of stories about crows.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) The frequency with which crows are sighted
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) The amount of research that has been conducted on crows
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The ease with which crows are identified
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 24. The word "comparable" in line 5 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) interestingly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) similar
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) otherwise
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) sometimes
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 25. In line 6, the author mention the endangered California condor as an example of a species that is
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) smaller than the crow
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) easily identifiable
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) featured in legends
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) very rare
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 26. In line 6, the author mentions the endangered California condor as an example of a species that is
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) crows
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) subjects
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) intentions
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) researchers
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 27.According to the second paragraph, crows are poor subjects for field research for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) They can successfully avoid observers.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) They are hard to distinguish from one another
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) They can be quite aggressive.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) They are difficult to catch.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec28. In the second paragraph, the author implies that using radio transmitters would allow a researcher who studies crow to (A) identify individual crows
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) follow flocks of crows over long distances
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) record the times when crows are most active
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) help crows that become sick or injured
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 29. According to the third paragraph, which of the following is true about crows?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) They seldom live in any one place for very long.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) They thrive in a wide variety of environments.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) They have marked preferences for certain kinds of foods.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) They use up the resources in one area before moving to another.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 30. In line 19,the word "inclinations" is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) tricks
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) opportunities
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) preferences
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) experiences
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 31. In lines 19-21, the author mentions a pet crow to illustrate which of the following? (A) The clever ways that crows solve problems
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) The differences between pet crows and wild crows
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) The ease with which crows can be tamed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The affection that crows show to other creatures
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 32. Which of the following statements is supported by the passage?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Crows have relatively long lives.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Crows have keen vision
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Crows are usually solitary
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Crows are very intelligent.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec QUESTIONS 33-41
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec In the early days of the United States, postal charges were paid by the recipient and
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Charges varied with the distance carried. In 1825, the United States Congress permitted
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec local postmasters to give letters to mail carriers for home delivery, but these carriers
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec received no government salary and their entire compensation depended on what they
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec were paid by the recipients of individual letters.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec In 1847 the United States Post Office Department adopted the idea of a postage stamp,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec which of course simplified the payment for postal service but caused grumbling by
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec those who did not like to prepay. Besides, the stamp covered only delivery to the post
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec office and did not include carrying it to a private address. In Philadelphia, for example,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec with a population of 150,000, people still had to go to the post office to get their mail.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec The confusion and congestion of individual citizens looking for their letters was itself
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec enough to discourage use of the mail. It is no wonder that, during the years of these
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec cumbersome arrangements, private letter-carrying and express businesses developed.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Although their activities were only semilegal, they thrived, and actually advertised that
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec between Boston and Philadelphia they were a half-day speedier than the government
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec mail. The government postal service lost volume to private competition and was not
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec able to handle efficiently even the business it had.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Finally, in 1863, Congress provided that the mail carriers who delivered the mail
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec from the post offices to private addresses should receive a government salary, and that
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec there should be no extra charge for that delivery. But this delivery service was at first
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec confined to cities, and free home delivery became a mark of urbanism. As late as 1887,
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec a town had to have 10,000 people to be eligible for free home delivery. In 1890, of the
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 75 million people in the United States, fewer than 20 million had mail delivered free
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec to their doors. Th e rest, nearly three-quarters of the population, still received no mail
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&decunless they went to their post office.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec33. What does the passage mainly discuss?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) The increased use of private mail services
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) The development of a government postal system
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) A comparison of urban and rural postal services
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The history of postage stamps.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 34. The word "varied" in line 2 could best be replaced by
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) increased
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) differed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) returned
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) started
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 35. Which of the following was seen as a disadvantage of the postage stamp?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) It had to be purchased by the sender in advance.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) It increased the cost of mail delivery.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) It was difficult to affix to letters.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) It was easy to counterfeit.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 36. Why does the author mention the city of Philadelphia in line 9?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) It was the site of the first post office in the United States.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Its postal service was inadequate for its population.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) It was the largest city in the United States in 1847.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) It was commemorated by the first United States postage stamp.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 37. The word "cumbersome" in line 13 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) burdensome
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) handsome
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C ) loathsome
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) quarrelsome
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 38. The word "they" in line 15 refers to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Boston and Philadelphia
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) businesses
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) arrangements
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) letters
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 39. The private postal services of the nineteenth century claimed that they could do which of the following better than the government?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Deliver a higher volume of mail.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Deliver mail more cheaply.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Deliver mail faster.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Deliver mail to rural areas.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 40. In 1863 the United States government began providing which of the following to mail carriers? (A) A salary
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Housing
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Transportation
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Free postage stamps
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 41. The word "Confined" in line 21 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) granted
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) scheduled
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) limited
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) recommended
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Questions 43-50
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Archaeology has long been an accepted tool for studying prehistoric cultures.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Relatively recently the same techniques have been systematically applied to studies of
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec the more immediate past. This has been called "historical archaeology," a term that is
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec used in the United States to refer to any archaeological investigation into North
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec American sites that postdate the arrival of Europeans.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec Back in the 1930’s and 1940’s, when building restoration was popular, historical <
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec br>archaeology was primarily a tool of architectural reconstruction. The role of archaeologists
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec was to find the foundations of historic buildings and then take a back seat to architects.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec The mania for reconstruction had largely subsided by 1950’s. Most
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec people entering historical archaeology during this period came out of university
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec anthropology departments., where they had studied prehistoric cultures. They were, by
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec training, social scientists, not historians, and their work tended to reflect this bias. The
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec questions they framed and the techniques they used were designed to help them
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec understand, as scientists, how people behaved. But because they were treading on
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec historical ground for which there was often extensive written documentation and because
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec their own knowledge of these periods was usually limited, their contributions to American
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec history remained circumscribed. Their reports, highly technical and sometimes poorly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec written, went unread.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&decMore recently, professional archaeologists have taken over. These researchers have
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec sought to demonstrate that their work can be a valuable tool not only of science but also
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec of history, providing fresh insights into the daily lives of ordinary people whose existences
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec might not otherwise be so well documented. This newer emphasis on archaeology as
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec social history has shown great promise, and indeed work done in this area has lead to a reinterpretation of the United States past.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec In Kingston, New York, for example, evidence has uncovered that indicates that
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec English goods were being smuggled into that city at a time when the Dutch supposedly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec controlled trading in the area. And in Sacramento an excavation at site of a fashionable nineteenth-century hotel revealed that garbage had been stashed in the building’s
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec basement despite sanitation laws to the contrary.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 42. What does the passage mainly discuss?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Why historical archaeology was first developed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) How the methods and purpose of historical archaeology have changed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) The contributions architects make to historical archaeology
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) The attitude of professional archaeologists toward historical archaeology
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 43. According to the first paragraph., what is a relatively new focus in archaeology?
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) Investigating the recess past
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) Studying prehistoric cultures
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) Excavating ancient sites in what is now the United States.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) Comparng ancient sites in what is now the United States.
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 44. According to the passage, when had historical archaeologists been trained as anthropologists? (A) Prior to the 1930’s
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) During the 1930’s and 1940’s
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) During the 1950’s and 1960’s
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) After the 1960’s
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 45. The word "framed" in line 13 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) understood
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) read
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) avoided
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) posed
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 46. In the third paragraph, the author implies that the techniques of history and the techniques of social science are
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) quite different from each other
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) equally useful in studying prehistoric cultures
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) usually taught to students of archaeology
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) both based on similar principles
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 47. The phrase "their contributions" in line 16 refers to the contributions of
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) social scientists
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) prehistoric cultures
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) historians
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) documentation and knowledge
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 48. The author mentions an excavation at the site of a hotel in Sacramento in order to give an example of
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) a building reconstruction project
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) the work of the earliest historical archaeologists
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) a finding that conflicts with written records
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) the kind of information that historians routinely examine
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 49. The word "supposedly" in line 26 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) ruthlessly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) tightly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) barely
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) seemingly
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec 50. The word "sanitation" in line 29 is closest in meaning to
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (A) city
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (B) housing
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (C) health
>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec (D) trade>Ù¶µüÀKforum.liuxuehome.com°:Ú¸Øw´.Ü&dec