READING PASSAGE 1
You should spend about
20 minutes on Questions 1-12, which are based on Reading Passage
1 below.
Scientists
Are Mapping the World's Largest Volcano
(A) After 36 days of battling sharks that kept biting their equipment,
scientists have returned from the remote Pacific Ocean with a new way of
looking at the world’s largest - and possibly most mysterious - volcano, Tamu
Massif.
(B) The
team has begun making 3-D maps that offer the clearest look yet at the
underwater mountain, which covers an area the size of New Mexico. In the coming
months, the maps will be refined and the data analyzed, with the ultimate goal
of figuring out how the mountain was formed.
(C) It's
possible that the western edge of Tamu Massif is actually a separate mountain
that formed at a different time, says William Sager, a geologist at the
University of Houston who led the expedition. That would explain some
differences between the western part of the mountain and the main body.
(D) The
team also found that the massif (as such a massive mountain is known) is highly
pockmarked with craters and cliffs. Magnetic analysis provides some insight
into the mountain’s genesis, suggesting that part of it formed through steady
releases of lava along the intersection of three mid-ocean ridges, while part
of it is harder to explain. A working theory is that a large plume of hot
mantle rock may have contributed additional heat and material, a fairly novel
idea.
(E) Tamu
Massif lies about 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) east of Japan. It is a rounded
dome, or shield volcano, measuring 280 by 400 miles (450 by 650 kilometers).
Its top lies more than a mile (about 2,000 meters) below the ocean surface and
is 50 times larger than the biggest active volcano on Earth, Hawaii’s Mauna
Loa. Sager published a paper in 2013 that said the main rise of Tamu Massif is
most likely a single volcano, instead of a complex of multiple volcanoes that
smashed together. But he couldn’t explain how something so big formed.
(F) The
team used sonar and magnetometers (which measure magnetic fields) to map more
than a million square kilometers of the ocean floor in great detail. Sager and
students teamed up with Masao Nakanishi of Japan’s Chiba University, with Sager
receiving funding support from the National Geographic Society and the Schmidt
Ocean Institute.
(G) Since
sharks are attracted to magnetic fields, the toothy fish “were all over our
magnetometer, and it got pretty chomped up,” says Sager. When the team replaced
the device with a spare, that unit was nearly ripped off by more sharks. The
magnetic field research suggests the mountain formed relatively quickly,
sometime around 145 million years ago. Part of the volcano sports magnetic
"stripes," or bands with different magnetic properties, suggesting
that lava flowed out evenly from the mid-ocean ridges over time and changed in
polarity each time Earth's magnetic field reversed direction. The central part
of the peak is more jumbled, so it may have formed more quickly or through a
different process.
(H) Sager
isn’t sure what caused the magnetic anomalies yet, but suspects more complex
forces were at work than simply eruptions from the ridges. It’s possible a deep
plume of hot rock from the mantle also contributed to the volcano’s formation,
he says. Sager hopes the analysis will also help explain about a dozen other
similar features on the ocean floor, as well as add to the overall
understanding of plate tectonics.
Questions 1-8
Reading Passage 1 has eight paragraphs, A-H.
What paragraph has the following information? Write
the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
1. Possible explanation of the differences between
parts of the mountain
2. Size data
3. A new way of looking
4. Problem with sharks
5. Uncertainty of the anomalies
6. Equipment which measures magnetic fields
7. The start of making maps
8. A working theory
Questions 9-12
Complete the sentences using NO MORE THAN
TWO WORDS from the passage.
Write your answers in boxes 9–12 on your answer sheet.
9. A large plume of ………………… rock may have contributed
additional heat and material.
10.Tamu Massif is a …………………. , or shield volcano.
11. Replacing the device with a ………………..didn't help, as that
unit was nearly ripped off by more sharks.
12. Sager believes that the magnetic anomalies were caused by
something more than……………………. from the ridges.
READING PASSAGE 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions
13-28, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
We know the city where HIV
first emerged
It is easy to see why AIDS seemed so
mysterious and frightening when US medics first encountered it 35 years ago.
The condition robbed young, healthy people of their strong immune system,
leaving them weak and vulnerable. And it seemed to come out of nowhere.
Today we know much more how and why HIV – the
virus that leads to AIDS – has become a global pandemic. Unsurprisingly, sex
workers unwittingly played a part. But no less important were the roles of
trade, the collapse of colonialism, and 20th Century sociopolitical reform.
HIV did not really appear out of nowhere, of
course. It probably began as a virus affecting monkeys and apes in west central
Africa.
From there it jumped species into humans on
several occasions, perhaps because people ate infected bushmeat. Some people
carry a version of HIV closely related to that seen in sooty mangabey monkeys,
for instance. But HIV that came from monkeys has not become a global problem.
We are more closely related to apes, like
gorillas and chimpanzees, than we are to monkeys. But even when HIV has passed
into human populations from these apes, it has not necessarily turned into a
widespread health issue.
HIV originating from apes typically belongs to
a type of virus called HIV-1. One is called HIV-1 group O, and human cases are
largely confined to west Africa.
In fact, only one form of HIV has spread far
and wide after jumping to humans. This version, which probably originated from
chimpanzees, is called HIV-1 group M (for "major"). More than 90% of
HIV infections belong in group M. Which raises an obvious question: what's so
special about HIV-1 group M?
A study published in 2014 suggests a
surprising answer: there might be nothing particularly special about group M.
It is not especially infectious, as you might
expect. Instead, it seems that this form of HIV simply took advantage of
events. "Ecological rather than evolutionary factors drove its rapid
spread," says NunoFaria at the University of Oxford in the UK.
Faria and his colleagues built a family tree
of HIV, by looking at a diverse array of HIV genomes collected from about 800
infected people from central Africa.
Genomes pick up new mutations at a fairly
steady rate, so by comparing two genome sequences and counting the differences
they could work out when the two last shared a common ancestor. This technique
is widely used, for example to establish that our common ancestor with
chimpanzees lived at least 7 million years ago.
"RNA viruses such as HIV evolve
approximately 1 million times faster than human DNA," says Faria. This
means the HIV "molecular clock" ticks very fast indeed.
It ticks so fast, Faria and his colleagues
found that the HIV genomes all shared a common ancestor that existed no more
than 100 years ago. The HIV-1 group M pandemic probably first began in the
1920s.
Then the team went further. Because they knew
where each of the HIV samples had been collected, they could place the origin
of the pandemic in a specific city: Kinshasa, now the capital of the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
At this point, the researchers changed tack.
They turned to historical records to work out why HIV infections in an African
city in the 1920s could ultimately spark a pandemic.
A likely sequence of events quickly became
obvious. In the 1920s, DR Congo was a Belgian colony and Kinshasa – then known
as Leopoldville – had just been made the capital. The city became a very
attractive destination for young working men seeking their fortunes, and for
sex workers only too willing to help them spend their earnings. The virus
spread quickly through the population.
It did not remain confined to the city. The
researchers discovered that the capital of the Belgian Congo was, in the 1920s,
one of the best connected cities in Africa. Taking full advantage of an
extensive rail network used by hundreds of thousands of people each year, the
virus spread to cities 900 miles (1500km) away in just 20 years.
Everything was in place for an explosion in
infection rates in the 1960s.The beginning of that decade brought another
change.
Belgian Congo gained its independence, and
became an attractive source of employment to French speakers elsewhere in the
world, including Haiti. When these young Haitians returned home a few years
later they took a particular form of HIV-1 group M, called "subtype
B", to the western side of the Atlantic.
It arrived in the US in the 1970s, just as
sexual liberation and homophobic attitudes were leading to concentrations of
gay men in cosmopolitan cities like New York and San Francisco. Once more, HIV
took advantage of the sociopolitical situation to spread quickly through the US
and Europe.
"There is no reason to believe that other
subtypes would not have spread as quickly as subtype B, given similar
ecological circumstances," says Faria.
The story of the spread of HIV is not over
yet.
For instance, in 2015 there was an outbreak in
the US state of Indiana, associated with drug injecting.
The US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has been analyzing the HIV genome sequences and data about location
and time of infection, says Yonatan Grad at the Harvard School of Public Health
in Boston, Massachusetts. "These data help to understand the extent of the
outbreak, and will further help to understand when public health interventions
have worked."
This approach can work for other pathogens. In
2014, Grad and his colleague Marc Lipsitch published an investigation into the
spread of drug-resistant gonorrhoea across the US.
"Because we had representative sequences
from individuals in different cities at different times and with different
sexual orientations, we could show the spread was from the west of the country
to the east," says Lipsitch.
What's more, they could confirm that the
drug-resistant form of gonorrhoea appeared to have circulated predominantly in
men who have sex with men. That could prompt increased screening in these
at-risk populations, in an effort to reduce further spread.
In other words, there is real power to
studying pathogens like HIV and gonorrhoea through the prism of human society.
Questions 13-20
Do the following statements agree with the information
given in Reading Passage 1?
In boxes 13-20 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN
if there is no information on this
13. AIDS were first encountered 35 years ago.
14. The most important role in developing AIDS as a pandemia was
played by sex workers.
15. It is believed that HIV appeared out of nowhere.
16. Humans are not closely related to monkey.
17. HIV-1 group O originated in 1920s.
18. HIV-1 group M has something special.
19. Human DNA evolves approximately 1 million times slower than HIV.
20. Scientists believe that HIV already existed in 1920s.
Questions 21-28
Complete the sentences below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for
each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 21-28 on your answer
sheet.
21. Scientists can place the origin of …………………. in a specific
city.
22. Kinshasa was a very…………………. for young working men and many
others willing to spend their money.
23. In just 20 years virus managed to………………………… cities 900 miles
away.
24. Belgian Congo became an attractive source of employment to French
speakers when it gained…………………….
25. HIV has spread quickly through the US and Europe because of the…………………. .
26. It is said that outbreak in Indiana was associated with………………………….
27. The same approach as for HIV can work for………………………
28. The form of gonorrhoea that is drug-resistant appeared to have…………………… in
men who have sex with men.
READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions
29-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Penguins' anti-ice trick revealed
Scientists studying penguins’ feathers have revealed how the birds
stay ice free when hopping in and out of below zero waters in the Antarctic. A
combination of nano-sized pores and an extra water repelling preening oil the
birds secrete is thought to give Antarctic penguins’ feathers superhydrophobic
properties. Researchers in the US made the discovery using Scanning Electron
Microscopy (SEM) to study penguin feathers in extreme detail. Antarctic
penguins live in one of Earth’s most extreme environments, facing temperatures
that drop to -40C, winds with speeds of 40 metres per second and water that
stays around -2.2C. But even in these sub-zero conditions, the birds manage to
prevent ice from coating their feathers.
“They are an amazing species, living in extreme conditions, and
great swimmers. Basically they are living engineering marvels,” says research
team member DrPirouzKavehpour, professor of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Birds’
feathers are known to have hydrophobic, or non-wetting, properties. But
scientists from UCLA, University of Massachusetts Amherst and SeaWorld, wanted
to know what makes Antarctic penguins’ feathers extra ice repelling.
“What we learn here is how penguins combine oil and
nano-structures on the feathers to produce this effect to perfection,” explains
Kavehpour. By analysing feathers from different penguin species, the
researchers discovered Antarctic species the gentoo penguin (Pygoscelispapua) was
more superhydrophobic compared with a species found in warmer climes – the
Magellanic penguin (Spheniscusmagellanicus) – whose breeding sites
include Argentinian desert.
Gentoo penguins’ feathers contained tiny pores which trapped air,
making the surface hydrophobic. And they were smothered with a special preening
oil, produced by a gland near the base of the tail, with which the birds cover
themselves. Together, these properties mean that in the wild, droplets of water
on Antarctic penguins’ superhydrophobic feathers bead up on the surface like
spheres – formations that, according to the team, could provide geometry that
delays ice formation, since heat cannot easily flow out of the water if the
droplet only has minimal contact with the surface of the feather.
“The shape of the droplet on the surface dictates the delay in
freezing,” explains Kavehpour. The water droplets roll off the penguin's
feathers before they have time to freeze, the researchers propose. Penguins
living in the Antarctic are highly evolved to cope with harsh conditions: their
short outer feathers overlap to make a thick protective layer over fluffier
feathers which keep them warm. Under their skin, a thick layer of fat keeps
them insulated. The flightless birds spend a lot of time in the sea and are
extremely agile and graceful swimmers, appearing much more awkward on land.
Kavehpour was inspired to study Antarctic penguins’ feathers after
watching the birds in a nature documentary: “I saw these birds moving in and
out of water, splashing everywhere. Yet there is no single drop of frozen ice
sticking to them,” he tells BBC Earth. His team now hopes its work could aid
design of better man-made surfaces which minimise frost formation.
“I would love to see biomimicking of these surfaces for important
applications, for example, de-icing of aircrafts,” says Kavehpour. Currently,
airlines spend a lot of time and money using chemical de-icers on aeroplanes,
as ice can alter the vehicles’ aerodynamic properties and can even cause them
to crash.
Questions 29-33
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 29-33 on
your answer sheet.
29. Penguins stay ice free due
to:
A.
A combination of nano-sized
pores
B.
An extra water repelling
preening oil
C.
A combination of nano-sized
pores and an extra water repelling preening oil
D.
A combination of various
factors
30. Antarctic penguins
experience extreme weather conditions, including:
A.
Low temperature, that can drop
to -40
B.
Severe wind, up to 40 metres
per second
C.
Below zero water temperature
D.
All of the above
31. In line 5 words engineering
marvels mean:
A.
That penguins are very
intelligent
B.
That penguins are good
swimmers
C.
That penguis are well
prepared to living in severe conditions
D.
Both B and C
32. Penguis feather has everything, EXCEPT:
A.
Hydrophobic properties
B.
Extra ice repelling
C.
Soft structures
D.
Oil structures
33. The gentoo penguin:
A.
Is less superhydrophobic
compared to the Magellanic penguin
B.
Has feathers that contain
tiny pores
C.
Can't swim
D.
Lives in Argentinian desert
Questions 34-40
Complete the sentences below.
Write ONLY ONE WORD from the passage for each
answer.
Write your answers in boxes 34-40 on your
answer sheet.
34. Formations like………………. could
provide geometry that delays ice formation.
35. The delay in freezing is
dictated by the………………. of the droplet.
36. Penguins in Antarctic are
highly evolved to be able to cope with conditions.
37. Penguins are insulated by
a layer of fat.
38. On the land, penguins
appear much more than in the sea.
39. The inspiration came to
Kavehpour after watching a about penguins.
40. Kavehpour would like to
see surfaces which minimise frost formation.
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