雅思聽力真題及答案網(wǎng)友版

雕龍文庫 分享 時間: 收藏本文

雅思聽力真題及答案網(wǎng)友版

  Dont wash those fossils!   Standard museum practice can wash away DNA.   1. Washing, brushing and varnishing fossils all standard conservation treatments used by many fossil hunters and museum curators alike vastly reduces the chances of recovering ancient DNA.   2. Instead, excavators should be handling at least some of their bounty with gloves, and freezing samples as they are found, dirt and all, concludes a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today.   3. Although many palaeontologists know anecdotally that this is the best way to up the odds of extracting good DNA, Eva-Maria Geigl of the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris, France, and her colleagues have now shown just how important conservation practices can be. This information, they say, needs to be hammered home among the people who are actually out in the field digging up bones.   4. Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year-old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs. The fossils were dug up at a site in France at two different times either in 1947, and stored in a museum collection, or in 2004, and conserved in sterile conditions at -20 oC.   5. The teams attempts to extract DNA from the 1947 bones all failed. The newly excavated fossils, however, all yielded DNA.   6. Because the bones had been buried for the same amount of time, and in the same conditions, the conservation method had to be to blame says Geigl. As much DNA was degraded in these 57 years as in the 3,200 years before, she says.   Wash in, wash out   7. Because many palaeontologists base their work on the shape of fossils alone, their methods of conservation are not designed to preserve DNA, Geigl explains.   8. The biggest problem is how they are cleaned. Fossils are often washed together on-site in a large bath, which can allow water and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA to permeate into the porous bones. Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in, says Geigl.   9. Most ancient DNA specialists know this already, says Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. But that doesnt mean that best practice has become widespread among those who actually find the fossils.   10. Getting hold of fossils that have been preserved with their DNA in mind relies on close relationships between lab-based geneticists and the excavators, says palaeogeneticist Svante P bo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. And that only occurs in exceptional cases, he says.   11. P bos team, which has been sequencing Neanderthal DNA, continually faces these problems. When you want to study ancient human and Neanderthal remains, theres a big issue of contamination with contemporary human DNA, he says.   12. This doesnt mean that all museum specimens are fatally flawed, notes P bo. The Neanderthal fossils that were recently sequenced in his own lab, for example, had been part of a museum collection treated in the traditional way. But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigls recommendations just in case.   Warm and wet   13. Geigl herself believes that, with cooperation between bench and field researchers, preserving fossils properly could open up avenues of discovery that have long been assumed closed.   14. Much human cultural development took place in temperate regions. DNA does not survive well in warm environments in the first place, and can vanish when fossils are washed and treated. For this reason, Geigl says, most ancient DNA studies have been done on permafrost samples, such as the woolly mammoth, or on remains sheltered from the elements in cold caves including cave bear and Neanderthal fossils.   15. Better conservation methods, and a focus on fresh fossils, could boost DNA extraction from more delicate specimens, says Geigl. And that could shed more light on the story of human evolution.   (640 words nature )   Glossary   Palaeontologists 古生物學家   Aurochs 歐洲野牛   Neanderthal (人類學)尼安德特人,舊石器時代的古人類。   Permafrost (地理)永凍層   Questions 1-6   Answer the following questions by using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.

  1. How did people traditionally treat fossils?   2. What suggestions do Geigl and her colleagues give on what should be done when fossils are found?   3. What problems may be posed if fossil bones are washed on-site? Name ONE.   4. What characteristic do fossil bones have to make them susceptible to be contaminated with contemporary DNA when they are washed?   5. What could be better understood when conservation treatments are improved?   6. The passage mentioned several animal species studied by researchers. How many of them are mentioned?   Questions 7-11   Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? Please write   TRUE if the statement agrees with the writer   FALSE if the statement does not agree with the writer   NOT GIVEN if there is no information about this in the passage   7. In their paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , Geigl and her colleagues have shown what conservation practices should be followed to preserve ancient DNA.   8. The fossil bones that Geigl and her colleagues studied are all from the same aurochs.   9. Geneticists dont have to work on site.   10. Only newly excavated fossil bones using new conservation methods suggested by Geigl and her colleagues contain ancient DNA.   11. Paabo is still worried about the potential problems caused by treatments of fossils in traditional way.   Questions 12-13   Complete the following the statements by choosing letter A-D for each answer.   12. This information in paragraph 3 indicates:   [A] It is critical to follow proper practices in preserving ancient DNA.   [B] The best way of getting good DNA is to handle fossils with gloves.   [C] Fossil hunters should wear home-made hammers while digging up bones.   [D] Many palaeontologists know how one should do in treating fossils.   13. The study conducted by Geigl and her colleagues suggests:   [A] the fact that ancient DNA can not be recovered from fossil bones excavated in the past.   [B] the correlation between the amount of burying time and that of the recovered   DNA.   [C] the pace at which DNA degrades.   [D] the correlation between conservation practices and degradation of DNA.   Suggested answers and explanations   1. washing, brushing, varnishing 見第一段。   2. handling with gloves / freezing samples ( any one of the two ) 見第二段。   3. losing authentic DNA / being contaminated / contamination ( any one of the three) 見第八段 Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in (答being contaminated或 contamination比較保險)   4. they are porous porous 的意思是多孔的。見第八段 。。。 which can allow water and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA to permeate into the porous bones.   5. human evolution 見第十五段。其中shed light on sth的意思是使某事顯得非常清楚,使人了解某事。   6. 4 分別為第四段的an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs,即歐洲野牛,已經(jīng)絕跡;第十一段 Neanderthal, 是人類學用語,尼安德特人,舊石器時代的古人類;第十四段woolly mammoth和cave bear,其中mammoth是猛犸,一種古哺乳動物。   7. T 見第二段。   8. T 見第四段 Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year- old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs. 即他們研究的骨化石是一頭歐洲野牛身上的。   9. NG   10. F 見第十二段第一、二句話。   11. T 見第十二段末句 But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigls recommendations just in case. 意即為保險起見,Paabo還是非常希望見到用Geigl建議的方法保存的化石樣本。just in case 的意思是以防萬一,就是Paabo對用傳統(tǒng)保存處理的化石不放心的意思。   12. A 見第三段。This information就是前一句中 。。。 just how important conservation practices can be (to preserve good DNA)。be hammered之中hammer一詞的意思是不斷重復強調。   13. D 面信息。需要理解文章各處關于Geigl和她的同事所作的研究

  

  Dont wash those fossils!   Standard museum practice can wash away DNA.   1. Washing, brushing and varnishing fossils all standard conservation treatments used by many fossil hunters and museum curators alike vastly reduces the chances of recovering ancient DNA.   2. Instead, excavators should be handling at least some of their bounty with gloves, and freezing samples as they are found, dirt and all, concludes a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today.   3. Although many palaeontologists know anecdotally that this is the best way to up the odds of extracting good DNA, Eva-Maria Geigl of the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris, France, and her colleagues have now shown just how important conservation practices can be. This information, they say, needs to be hammered home among the people who are actually out in the field digging up bones.   4. Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year-old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs. The fossils were dug up at a site in France at two different times either in 1947, and stored in a museum collection, or in 2004, and conserved in sterile conditions at -20 oC.   5. The teams attempts to extract DNA from the 1947 bones all failed. The newly excavated fossils, however, all yielded DNA.   6. Because the bones had been buried for the same amount of time, and in the same conditions, the conservation method had to be to blame says Geigl. As much DNA was degraded in these 57 years as in the 3,200 years before, she says.   Wash in, wash out   7. Because many palaeontologists base their work on the shape of fossils alone, their methods of conservation are not designed to preserve DNA, Geigl explains.   8. The biggest problem is how they are cleaned. Fossils are often washed together on-site in a large bath, which can allow water and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA to permeate into the porous bones. Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in, says Geigl.   9. Most ancient DNA specialists know this already, says Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. But that doesnt mean that best practice has become widespread among those who actually find the fossils.   10. Getting hold of fossils that have been preserved with their DNA in mind relies on close relationships between lab-based geneticists and the excavators, says palaeogeneticist Svante P bo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. And that only occurs in exceptional cases, he says.   11. P bos team, which has been sequencing Neanderthal DNA, continually faces these problems. When you want to study ancient human and Neanderthal remains, theres a big issue of contamination with contemporary human DNA, he says.   12. This doesnt mean that all museum specimens are fatally flawed, notes P bo. The Neanderthal fossils that were recently sequenced in his own lab, for example, had been part of a museum collection treated in the traditional way. But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigls recommendations just in case.   Warm and wet   13. Geigl herself believes that, with cooperation between bench and field researchers, preserving fossils properly could open up avenues of discovery that have long been assumed closed.   14. Much human cultural development took place in temperate regions. DNA does not survive well in warm environments in the first place, and can vanish when fossils are washed and treated. For this reason, Geigl says, most ancient DNA studies have been done on permafrost samples, such as the woolly mammoth, or on remains sheltered from the elements in cold caves including cave bear and Neanderthal fossils.   15. Better conservation methods, and a focus on fresh fossils, could boost DNA extraction from more delicate specimens, says Geigl. And that could shed more light on the story of human evolution.   (640 words nature )   Glossary   Palaeontologists 古生物學家   Aurochs 歐洲野牛   Neanderthal (人類學)尼安德特人,舊石器時代的古人類。   Permafrost (地理)永凍層   Questions 1-6   Answer the following questions by using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.

  1. How did people traditionally treat fossils?   2. What suggestions do Geigl and her colleagues give on what should be done when fossils are found?   3. What problems may be posed if fossil bones are washed on-site? Name ONE.   4. What characteristic do fossil bones have to make them susceptible to be contaminated with contemporary DNA when they are washed?   5. What could be better understood when conservation treatments are improved?   6. The passage mentioned several animal species studied by researchers. How many of them are mentioned?   Questions 7-11   Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? Please write   TRUE if the statement agrees with the writer   FALSE if the statement does not agree with the writer   NOT GIVEN if there is no information about this in the passage   7. In their paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , Geigl and her colleagues have shown what conservation practices should be followed to preserve ancient DNA.   8. The fossil bones that Geigl and her colleagues studied are all from the same aurochs.   9. Geneticists dont have to work on site.   10. Only newly excavated fossil bones using new conservation methods suggested by Geigl and her colleagues contain ancient DNA.   11. Paabo is still worried about the potential problems caused by treatments of fossils in traditional way.   Questions 12-13   Complete the following the statements by choosing letter A-D for each answer.   12. This information in paragraph 3 indicates:   [A] It is critical to follow proper practices in preserving ancient DNA.   [B] The best way of getting good DNA is to handle fossils with gloves.   [C] Fossil hunters should wear home-made hammers while digging up bones.   [D] Many palaeontologists know how one should do in treating fossils.   13. The study conducted by Geigl and her colleagues suggests:   [A] the fact that ancient DNA can not be recovered from fossil bones excavated in the past.   [B] the correlation between the amount of burying time and that of the recovered   DNA.   [C] the pace at which DNA degrades.   [D] the correlation between conservation practices and degradation of DNA.   Suggested answers and explanations   1. washing, brushing, varnishing 見第一段。   2. handling with gloves / freezing samples ( any one of the two ) 見第二段。   3. losing authentic DNA / being contaminated / contamination ( any one of the three) 見第八段 Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in (答being contaminated或 contamination比較保險)   4. they are porous porous 的意思是多孔的。見第八段 。。。 which can allow water and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA to permeate into the porous bones.   5. human evolution 見第十五段。其中shed light on sth的意思是使某事顯得非常清楚,使人了解某事。   6. 4 分別為第四段的an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs,即歐洲野牛,已經(jīng)絕跡;第十一段 Neanderthal, 是人類學用語,尼安德特人,舊石器時代的古人類;第十四段woolly mammoth和cave bear,其中mammoth是猛犸,一種古哺乳動物。   7. T 見第二段。   8. T 見第四段 Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year- old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs. 即他們研究的骨化石是一頭歐洲野牛身上的。   9. NG   10. F 見第十二段第一、二句話。   11. T 見第十二段末句 But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigls recommendations just in case. 意即為保險起見,Paabo還是非常希望見到用Geigl建議的方法保存的化石樣本。just in case 的意思是以防萬一,就是Paabo對用傳統(tǒng)保存處理的化石不放心的意思。   12. A 見第三段。This information就是前一句中 。。。 just how important conservation practices can be (to preserve good DNA)。be hammered之中hammer一詞的意思是不斷重復強調。   13. D 面信息。需要理解文章各處關于Geigl和她的同事所作的研究

  

信息流廣告 競價托管 招生通 周易 易經(jīng) 代理招生 二手車 網(wǎng)絡推廣 自學教程 招生代理 旅游攻略 非物質文化遺產(chǎn) 河北信息網(wǎng) 石家莊人才網(wǎng) 買車咨詢 河北人才網(wǎng) 精雕圖 戲曲下載 河北生活網(wǎng) 好書推薦 工作計劃 游戲攻略 心理測試 石家莊網(wǎng)絡推廣 石家莊招聘 石家莊網(wǎng)絡營銷 培訓網(wǎng) 好做題 游戲攻略 考研真題 代理招生 心理咨詢 游戲攻略 興趣愛好 網(wǎng)絡知識 品牌營銷 商標交易 游戲攻略 短視頻代運營 秦皇島人才網(wǎng) PS修圖 寶寶起名 零基礎學習電腦 電商設計 職業(yè)培訓 免費發(fā)布信息 服裝服飾 律師咨詢 搜救犬 Chat GPT中文版 語料庫 范文網(wǎng) 工作總結 二手車估價 情侶網(wǎng)名 愛采購代運營 情感文案 古詩詞 邯鄲人才網(wǎng) 鐵皮房 衡水人才網(wǎng) 石家莊點痣 微信運營 養(yǎng)花 名酒回收 石家莊代理記賬 女士發(fā)型 搜搜作文 石家莊人才網(wǎng) 銅雕 關鍵詞優(yōu)化 圍棋 chatGPT 讀后感 玄機派 企業(yè)服務 法律咨詢 chatGPT國內版 chatGPT官網(wǎng) 勵志名言 兒童文學 河北代理記賬公司 教育培訓 游戲推薦 抖音代運營 朋友圈文案 男士發(fā)型 培訓招生 文玩 大可如意 保定人才網(wǎng) 黃金回收 承德人才網(wǎng) 石家莊人才網(wǎng) 模型機 高度酒 沐盛有禮 公司注冊 造紙術 唐山人才網(wǎng) 沐盛傳媒
主站蜘蛛池模板: 毛片在线免费观看网站| 美女内射毛片在线看3D| 岛国a香蕉片不卡在线观看| 亚洲精品在线视频| 国产亚洲sss在线播放| 成人片黄网站色大片免费 | 最近中文字幕免费高清mv| 国产69精品久久久久777| 亚洲人和日本人jizz| 色综合久久中文字幕无码| 好吊色欧美一区二区三区视频| 亚洲人成网站18禁止久久影院 | 亚洲免费观看在线视频| 羞羞视频免费看| 国产精品无圣光一区二区| 丰满少妇又爽又紧又丰满在线观看| 波多野结衣视频网址| 国产亚洲精品aaaaaaa片| 99久久人妻精品免费一区| 日本高清护士xxxxx| 亚洲精品成人片在线播放 | 麻豆国产入口在线观看免费| 强行扒开双腿猛烈进入| 亚洲av之男人的天堂| 粉嫩被粗大进进出出视频| 国产强被迫伦姧在线观看无码| groupsex娇小紧的5一8| 日本护士激情xxxx| 亚洲男人的天堂在线| 自拍偷拍999| 国产真实乱子伦精品| silk131中字在线观看| 日本边添边摸边做边爱喷水| 亚洲第一区视频| 综合激情区视频一区视频二区| 国产欧美在线观看精品一区二区| mm1313亚洲国产精品无码试看| 日韩a级毛片免费视频| 亚洲日本天堂在线| 精品91自产拍在线| 国产亚洲欧美日韩精品一区二区|