2022届广东省肇庆市高中毕业班第三次教学质量检测英语试题.docx
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1、2022届广东省肇庆市高中毕业班第三次教学质量检测英语试题学校:_姓名:_班级:_考号:_一、阅读理解Amazing Train JourneysThe Beijing to Lhasa Express, ChinaDeparts daily; Distance2,330 miles; Duration40 hoursLinking the royal wonders of Beijing with the dreamlike palaces of Lhasa, the Z21 train travels from the modernity of urban China to a once-
2、remote land. Running westward, the train climbs nearly 16,400 ft (5,000 m) on its journey to the roof of the world: the Tibetan Plateau.London to Fort William on the Caledonian Sleeper, UKDeparts daily; Distance509 miles; Duration13 hours 30 minutesThis overnight train journey is filled with the rom
3、ance of rail travel. Its just a pity that the whole experiencefrom dining-car chatting and light beer, to being carried into a la-la land by the rhythm of the rails and waking to bedside views of towering peaksfeels like its over in a flash. Though it may be short, the Caledonian is surely Britains
4、best train ride.Tazara Railway, Tanzania and ZambiaDeparts twice a week; Distance1,160 miles; Duration46 hoursFew trains offer the chance of spotting big game from your seat, but the Tazara Railway does exactly that. For many, the highlight is neither the scenery nor the wildlife, though; its the ch
5、ance to spend two days watching everyday life out of the window, and enjoying the crowds and chaos when the train pulls to a stop.Perurails Lake Titicaca Railway, PeruDeparts twice a week; Distance241 miles; Duration10 hoursTraveling across the Altiplano, from the shores of Lake Titicaca to the beat
6、ing heart of the Inca capital, the railway from Puno to Cuzco cuts a picturesque path through the snow-dusted peaks and fantastic valleys of the Andes. Passengers can enjoy the landscape from an open-air observatory car, as they travel through remote towns and villages.1What do the first two train j
7、ourneys have in common?AThey make weekly departure.BThey are over a thousand miles.CThey travel to highlands.DThey are the longest train rides nationwide.2On which journey can passengers watch peoples daily life outside the train?ATazara Railway.BThe Beijing to Lhasa Express.CPerurails Lake Titicaca
8、 Railway.DLondon to Fort William on the Caledonian Sleeper.3What can passengers do on Perurails Lake Titicaca Railway?ATravel around Lake Titicaca.BAdmire the view in the open air.CGo through two countries on a journey.DHave a deep understanding of towns and villages.A hungry badger (獾) searching fo
9、r food seems to have uncovered what turned out to be hundreds of Roman coins in a Spanish cave, according to a new study.Archaeologists (考古学家) first discovered several coins laying on the ground at the entrance to a small cave in the woodlands outside Grado in northern Spain in April 2021. The resea
10、rchers suspect that the coins were unearthed by a badger from a nearby den (兽窝) after a heavy snow which made it harder for animals to find food. The hungry badger probably got into the cave looking for food but came across the coins instead.After fully exploring the cave, researchers collected 209
11、coins dating to between the third and fifth centuries AD“To date, this is the largest amount of Roman coins found in n cave in northern Spain,” the researchers wrote in their paper. They described the discovery as an “exceptional find”.In the late 1930s, a collection of 14 gold Roman coins, known as
12、 the Chapipi treasure, was also found in the same woodlands. The researchers believe that local people may have buried their coins to keep them safe during a period of intense political instability in the region. The most recent coin in the newly-discovered Grado collection dates to AD430, which was
13、 after the Suebia group of Germanic people originally from modern-day Germany and the Czech Republicpushed the Romans out of Spain in AD409, according to El Pais.The researchers suspect that the newly-discovered coins are part of a vaster treasure and will return to the cave for further exploration
14、to look for more coins and evidence that the cave may also have been the home of displaced Roman people. “We want to know if it was a one-off hiding place, or if there was a group of humans living there,” lead researcher Alfonso Fanjul Peraza told El Pais.4Where did the researchers find the first fe
15、w coins in 2021?ANear a Spanish cave.BOn a Spanish playground.CAt the entrance to a woodland.DIn a badgers den.5What do the researchers think of the discovery in 2021?AIts dangerous.BIts timely.CIts meaningless.DIts unusual.6What does the underlined word “them” refer to in Paragraph 4?AThe Romans.BT
16、he coins.CThe woodlands.DThe researchers.7What can we infer from the last paragraph?AMore information may be revealed by the coins.BThe ancient Roman people had a unique lifestyle.CThe researchers doubt the former guess of the coins.DThe researchers will return the coins to the Roman people.Its an a
17、ttractive idea: by playing online problem-solving, matching and other games for a few minutes a day, people can improve such mental abilities as reasoning, verbal skills (语言能力) and memory. But whether these games deliver on those promises is up for debate. “For every study that finds some evidence,
18、theres an equal number of papers that find no evidence,” says Bobby Stojanoski, a cognitive (认知的) psychologist at Western University in Ontario.Recently, in perhaps the biggest real-world study of these programs, Stojanoski and his team found 8,563 volunteers. First, participants filled out an onlin
19、e questionnaire about their training habits and which, if any, program they used. Some 1,009 participants reported using brain training programs for about eight months on average, though durations ranged from two weeks to more than five years. Next, the volunteers completed 12 cognitive tests assess
20、ing memory, reasoning and verbal skills. They faced memory exercises, spatial reasoning tasks, pattern-finding puzzles and strategy challenges.When researchers looked at the results, they saw that brain trainers on average had no mental edge over the other group in memory, verbal skills and reasonin
21、g. Even among those who had used training programs for at least 18 months, brain training didnt boost thinking abilities above the level of people who didnt use the programs.“No matter how we sliced the data, we were unable to find any testimony that brain training was associated with cognitive abil
22、ities,” says Stojanoski. That held true whether the team analyzed participants by age, program used, education or socioeconomic status (地位)all were cognitively similar to the group who didnt use the programs.“Brain training may be beneficial in specific situations, but real world may be the best bra
23、in trainer,” says Elizabeth Stine-Morrow, a cognitive aging scientist at the University of Illinois. While its possible to improve mental abilities, Stine-Morrow advocates practicing those skills in different real-life situations, “Thats a much better use of ones time than sitting at a computer and
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