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        Saving Our Planet

【A】In the long view, the human relationship with forests has been one of brutal destruction, but even it carries elements of slow hope. In the Middle Ages, there was no shortage of timber in most parts of the world, and few saw cutting down forests as a problem. Yet in 1548 the people of Venice estimated that an important timber supply would last only 30 years at their current rate of usage—but different forest management would make it possible to meet the demand for many centuries to come. The idea of preserving resources came out of a concern for the future: a fear of using up resources faster than they could be replenished (补充).
【B】Economic interests were at the core of this understanding of trees and forests. It would take more than three centuries before scientists began to understand that timber production is not the only, and possibly not the most important, function of forests. The late 19th and early 20th century saw an increasing recognition that forests serve as habitats for countless animal and plant species that all rely on each other. They take over protective functions against soil erosion and landslides (塌方); they make a significant contribution to the water balance as they prevent surface runoff; they filter dirt particles, greenhouse gases and radioactive substances from the air; they produce oxygen; they provide spaces for recreation and they preserve historic and prehistoric remains. As a result, forests around the world have been set aside as parks or wilderness areas.
【C】Recent years have seen a big change in our view of forests. Peter Wohlleben’s book The Hidden Life of Trees (2015), an international bestseller, suggests that trees can warn each other of danger through a ‘wood wide web’ of roots and fungi (真菌). They support each other through sharing of nutrients and information, and they even keep ancient stumps alive by feeding them solutions of sugars. Such insights have made us aware of deep ecological relationships between humans and the more-than-human world.
【D】Awareness of ecologies is a recent phenomenon. It was not until the 1940s that the concept of the ‘environment’ embracing all living and nonliving things developed. In the 1970s, the term ‘environment’ gained currency, becoming widely adopted in the English and Romance languages, and as ‘Umwelt’ (‘surrounding world’) in German. The emergence of the idea led to the rise of environmental agencies, regulations and environmental studies, and to environmental science as new, integrated academic disciplines. It was in 1956 that the very first bachelor of science in environmental studies was awarded, at the State University of New York College of Forestry at Syracuse. Since the 1970s—with the rise of ‘environmentalism’—environmental studies programmes have sprung up at hundreds of universities. There is (slow) hope in the fact that scholars from many different disciplines have adopted the term ‘environment’ over the past decades. They are exploring intricate connections within and between complex ecologies, as well as the impact that human environment-making (through techno-industrial, economic and other manipulative developments) has had on the biosphere.
【E】The rise of the idea of the environment and a scholarly understanding of ecological processes has influenced new technologies and also politics. We have come to ask questions about vulnerability and risk, world ecologies, and the relationship between nature and power. The search for an adequate response to climate change occupies centre stage in international diplomacy.
【F】Social and environmental activists, scientists and indigenous groups have called the Paris Agreement of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in December 2015 insufficient, weak, or compromised. To some extent, they are right: climate change has already destroyed tens of thousands of livelihoods, and the situation will worsen in the near future for millions of mostly poorer people, who will join the ranks of those who have already been displaced by climate change and extreme weather events. But the Paris Conference nevertheless marked a historic step toward the recognition of the need for action on climate change, the cutting of carbon emissions, and world cooperation. There were 195 nations that came to the table in Paris and agreed to limits on emissions. Historically, nothing comparable had happened prior to this. Before the 20th century, a handful of scientists had been interested in the theoretical relationship between greenhouse gases and climate change, but only the empirical evidence accumulated since the late 20th century established a clear connection between the burning of fossil fuels and a vastly accelerated rise in global temperatures.
【G】The current crisis is not the first that humans have encountered, and a look at the struggles with pollution in recent history reveals transformations that once seemed unimaginable. The ‘London fog’ that came to define the capital through British novels and thrillers is in reality smog or smoke, a legacy of industrialisation. After a century of ignorance, London was hit by the Great Smog of December 1952—the worst air-pollution event in the history of the United Kingdom which caused the deaths of approximately 12,000 people. Shortly thereafter, public initiatives and political campaigns led to strict regulations and new laws, including the Clean Air Act (1956). Today, London has effectively reduced traffic emissions through the introduction of a Congestion Charge Zone in 2003, and an Ultra Low Emission Zone in 2019.
【H】Scientific evidence that we are living in an era of climate change, resource exhaustion and potential ecological disaster is overwhelming. How do we motivate a public exhausted by never-ending scenarios of doom and disaster, when the challenges seem so huge and so impossible to solve? Statistics about extinction and the gloom of decline will not in themselves get us out of our often self-created ecological traps: instead, they are more likely to result in paralysis and inaction.
【I】We need stories and histories of change and transformation: ecological stories that make us confront the fact that human power is potentially destructive, and that the survival of our species on this planet depends on the preservation of soil and water, and the habitats and ecological systems.
【J】It is time that we showed successes and accelerations in ecological awareness, action and restoration: stories that include past successes and future visions about the rise of urban gardening and of renaturalised riverscapes, of successful protests against polluted air and water, of the rise of regional markets and slow food, and the planting of trees around the globe, of initiatives and enterprises that work towards ecological restoration. The reality of ecological curses seems far greater than the power of the hopes left at the bottom of Pandora’s box. But if we believe that nothing can be changed, then we are giving up our opportunity to act.
【K】Today’s saving powers will not come from a deus ex machina (解围之神). In an ever-more complex and synthetic world, our saving powers won’t come from a single source, and certainly not from a too-big-to-fail approach or from those who have been drawn into the whirlpool of our age of speed. Hope can work as a wakeup call. It acknowledges setbacks. The concept of slow hope suggests that we can’t expect things to change overnight. If the ever-faster exhaustion of natural resources (in ecological terms) and the ‘shrinking of the present’ (in social terms) are urgent problems of humans, then cutting down on exhaustive practices and working towards a ‘stretching of the present’ will be ways to move forward.

38. There is abundant evidence that we are now facing a possible ecological disaster.

A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
K
K
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答案:

H

解析:

36. 气候变化给成千上万人的生活造成了严重破坏。

解析:F。根据题干中的Climate change、havoc和lives of tens of thousands of people可定位至F段第二句。该句说到,在某种程度上,他们说的没错:气候变化已经摧毁了成千上万人的生计。题干中的Climate change原词复现,havoc对应该句的destroyed,lives of tens of thousands of people是对句中tens of thousands of livelihoods的同义替换,题干是对F段第二句部分内容的同义转述。

37. 科学家花了很长时间才意识到森林的功能远远不止为人类提供木材。

解析:B。根据题干中的scientists、a long time to realise和the function of forests可定位至B段第二句。该句提到,经过三个多世纪,科学家才开始认识到木材产出不是森林的唯一功能,可能也不是最重要的功能。题干中的scientists和function of forests原词复现,took...a long time to realise是对该句中It would take more than three centuries before...understand的近义改写,goes far beyond providing humans with timber是对该句中timber production is not the only的同义替换,题干是对B段第二句的近义概括。

38. 大量证据表明,我们正面临着一场可能会发生的生态灾难。

解析:H。根据题干中的abundant evidence和a possible ecological disaster可定位至H段第一句。该句提到,有大量的科学证据表明,我们生活在一个气候变化、资源枯竭和潜在生态灾难横行的时代。题干中的abundant对应定位句中的overwhelming,evidence和ecological disaster原词复现,possible是对句中potential的同义替换,题干是对H段第一句的近义改写。

39. 大约60年前,环境科学才成为学术学科。

解析:D。根据题干中的Environmental science、academic disciplines和some sixty years ago可定位至D段第四、五句。第四句提到,“环境”这一概念的出现带来了环境机构、环境法规和环境研究的兴起,并使环境科学成为新的综合性学科。接着在第五句提到具体时间:在1956年,也就是60多年前,雪城的纽约州立大学林业学院颁发了第一个环境研究科学学士学位。题干中的Environmental science和academic disciplines原词复现,some sixty years ago对应第五句的1956,题干是对D段第四、五句部分内容的近义改写。

40. 事情不可能在一夜之间改变,但减少自然资源的消耗有助于解决生态危机。

解析:K。根据题干中的overnight和reducing the consumption of natural resources可定位至K段最后两句。这两句主要是讲解决生态危机之道,倒数第二句提到,我们不能指望事情在一夜之间发生改变,最后一句中又提到,前行的道路就是要减少不留余地的做法。题干中的change overnight原词复现,reducing the consumption of natural resources对应最后一句中的cutting down on exhaustive practices,题干是对K段最后两句部分内容的同义转述。

41. 人类对森林的认识在过去这些年发生了巨大的变化。

解析:C。根据题干中的perception of forests、a tremendous change和in the past years可定位至C段第一句。该句提到,近年来我们对森林的看法发生了很大的变化。题干中的perception of forests是对该句中view of forests的同义替换,a tremendous change是对该句中a big change的同义替换,in the past years对应句中的Recent years,题干是对C段第一句的同义改写。

42. 近代历史表明,减少污染曾经看似不可能,但实际上是可以实现的。

解析:G。根据题干中的Recent history、reduction of pollution和once seemingly impossible可定位至G段第一句。该句提到,纵观近代历史上人类与污染作斗争的过程,我们会发现曾经想象不到的变化正在发生。题干中的Recent history原词复现,reduction of pollution对应句中的struggles with pollution,once seemingly impossible是对句中once seemed unimaginable的同义替换,题干是对原文G段第一句部分内容的近义转述。

43. 人们开始考虑保护自然资源,因为他们担心将来没有资源可用。

解析:A。根据题干中的preserving natural resources、feared和have nothing to use in the future可定位至A段最后一句。该句提到,保护资源的想法来自于对未来的担忧:人们害怕资源耗竭的速度会快于资源得到补充的速度。题干中的preserving natural resources对应该句中的preserving resources,feared对应句中的a fear of,have nothing to use in the future对应句中的using up resources faster than they could be replenished,题干是对原文A段最后一句的近义改写。

44. 如果我们质疑自己扭转生态恶化的能力,就相当于放弃了采取行动的机会。

解析:J。根据题干中的doubt our ability to reverse ecological deterioration和the chance to take action可定位至J段最后一句。该句提到,如果我们认为什么也改变不了,那就相当于放弃了行动的机会。题干中的doubt our ability to reverse ecological deterioration是对句中believe that nothing can be changed的近义替换,throwing away the chance to take action是对句中giving up our opportunity to act的同义替换,题干是对J段最后一句的同义转述。

45. 如何有效应对气候变化已成为国际外交的焦点。 

解析:E。根据题干中的respond effectively to climate change和focus of international diplomacy可定位至E段最后一句。该句指出,寻求足够应对气候变化的方案占据了国际外交的中心舞台。题干中的respond effectively to climate change对应句中的an adequate response to climate change,has become the focus of international diplomacy是对句中occupies centre stage in international diplomacy的同义替换,题干是对原文E段最后一句的同义转述。

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