1.阅读理解

SIX60 Saturdays

Sat 29 Oct 2022

SIX60 Saturdays is here this Saturday! The band has just released their latest single Before You Leave, off their fourth studio album (音乐专辑) Castle St released on 7 October. These shows will be fans 'first chance to see their new songs played live.

This year's show at Sky Stadium in Wellington will be joined by special guests Niko Walters, Coterie, Supergroove, and Tones and I.

Perth-based Kiwi band of brothers Coterie, has been handpicked by SIX60 to open all six shows on the SIX60 Saturdays stadium tour kicking off this October. These shows will be the first-ever shows in New Zealand for the local Maori tribes (部落) of Te Aupouri, Ngapuhi and Ngai Te Rangi, making the shows even more important.

Tickets

Tickets are on sale now through Ticketek.

We strongly advise against buying tickets from any unauthorized(未经授权的)ticket re-seller as the tickets may not be real or may be cancelled by the event organiser. Ticketek is the only authorized sales channel for SIX60 concert in Wellington.

Car parking

Car parking space is available to buy online through Ticketek. It is highly recommended that you buy your space online in advance, especially if you are coming from out of town. The car park was full at last year's show.

Accessibility information

To buy a wheelchair ticket, please call Ticketek on their wheelchair booking line:0800686677. You cannot book wheelchair tickets online.

For more information about the show, please visit SIX60 Saturdays' official site.

(1) Which special guest will be present at the beginning of all SIX60 Saturdays' shows? A. Supergroove. B. Coterie. C. Niko Walters. D. Tones and I.
(2) What is special about SIX60 Saturdays' shows in New Zealand? A. They are partly held online. B. They are free for the disabled. C. They are meaningful to some local tribes. D. They are hosted by handpicked stadiums.
(3) What should the audience know about the show in Wellington? A. There are enough car parking spaces. B. They can book wheelchair tickets online. C. 0800686677 is a booking line for all tickets. D. They have to buy tickets through Ticketek.
【考点】
推理判断题; 细节理解题; 时文广告类;
【答案】

您现在未登录,无法查看试题答案与解析。 登录
阅读理解 未知 普通
能力提升
真题演练
换一批
1.阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项 (A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

The Amazon rainforest, is as undisturbed a place as most people can imagine, but even there, the effects of a changing climate are playing out. Now, research suggests that many of the region's most sensitive bird species are starting to evolve in response to warming.

Birds are often considered sentinel(哨兵)species-meaning that they indicate the overall health of an ecosystem-so scientists are particularly interested in how they're responding to climate change. In general, the news has not been good. For instance, a 2019 report by the National Audubon Society found that more than two-thirds of North America's bird species will be in danger of extinction by 2100 if warming trends continue on their current course.

For the new study, researchers collected the biggest dataset so far on the Amazon's resident birds, representing 77 non-migratory species and lasting the 40 years from 1979 to 2019. During the study period, the average temperature in the region rose, while the amount of rainfall declined, making for a hotter, dryer climate overall. According to the report on November 12 in the journal Science Advances, 36 species have lost substantial weight, as much as 2 percent of their body weight per decade since 1980. Meanwhile, all the species showed some decrease in average body mass, while a third grew longer wings.

Because of the study's long time series and large sample sizes, the authors were able to show the morphological(形态学的)effects of climate change on resident birds. However, the researchers themselves are unsure and wonder what advantage the wing length changes give the birds, but suppose smaller birds may have an easier time keeping cool. In general, smaller animals have a larger rate of surface area to body size, so they dissipate more heat faster than a bigger animal. Less available food, such as fruit or insects, in dryer weather might lead to smaller body size.

(1) Why are scientists fond of doing research on birds? A. They have small body sizes. B. They are sensitive to hot weather. C. They live in an undisturbed rainforest. D. They are ecological balance indicators.
(2) What can we learn from the new study? A. A third of species have been extinct for a decade. B. 36 species lost 2% of their body weight every year. C. Two-thirds of species showed a considerable decrease in weight. D. About 26 species responded to climate change with longer wings.
(3) What does the underlined word "dissipate" in the last paragraph mean? A. Put off. B. Give off. C. Put away. D. Give away.
(4) What would probably the researchers further study? A. Why it is easier for smaller animals to keep cool. B. What effects the wing length changes have on birds. C. Why the Amazonian birds have lost substantial weight. D. Whether bird species in North America will be extinct in 2100.
阅读理解 常考题 普通
3.阅读理解

Thousands of years before Facebook, Twitter and TikTok, tiny beads helped humans make social connections. A decade-long study of more than 1, 500 beads made from bird eggshells and found across Africa has revealed a 50, 000-year-old social network, archaeologists say.

"People made them to communicate symbolic messages, the way that today we might wear a wedding ring, to indicate something about social status, wealth or position in society, "said Jennifer Miller, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Archaeology at the MaxPlanck Institute for the Science of Hunan History, in Jena, Germany.

They studied 1, 516 beads (1, 238 of which were described for the first time) that originated from 31 different sites across southern and eastern Africa and spanned (跨越)the last50, 000 years. Comparing the different characteristics of the beads—the size and thickness, they found that between 33, 000 and 50, 000 years ago, people at sites across southern and eastern Africa--spanning a distance of more than 3, 000 kilometers (about 1, 864 miles)—were using almost identical beads.

"We know that genetically these groups had some sort of contact, but there so far has been no cultural evidence, "said Miller, who was an author of the study, which was published on Monday in the journal Nature. The oldest beads come from East Africa, the study found, and likely spread south across the continent from there. The authors described it as the oldest social network ever identified and the furthest Old Stone Age "stylistic connection "ever documented.

While it's possible the beads could have been directly exchanged in some way, Miller thought more likely it was the knowledge of how to make them that was exchanged. "Possibly people would have seen this new thing that people were wearing or making and thought, 'Oh, that's so cool. 'And then copied it, "Miller said. "And so in that way, rather than obtaining these beads directly, it might have been more of copying the cool new thing."

(1) Why did people in Africa make tiny beads 50, 000 years ago? A. To use them as presents. B. To show their social status. C. To exchange things with others. D. To tell others they were married.
(2) What did the researchers find about the beads between 33, 000 and 50, 000 years ago? A. They were almost the same. B. They had different sizes and thicknesses. C. They originated from 31 different sites in Germany. D. They were made in the New Stone Age.
(3) How did the beads most likely spread across the continent according to Miller? A. They were directly exchanged. B. Ancient people had to move frequently. C. There was a demand for communication. D. The knowledge of making them spread.
(4) What's the best title for the text? A. The history of tiny beads in Africa B. The cultural significance of beads C. A stone-age social network in Africa D. A newfound function of bird eggshells
阅读理解 模拟题 普通