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Day 142 IELTS Academic Reading Questions & Answers by KenyanNurse - 220507 - 073918
Day 142 IELTS Academic Reading Questions & Answers by KenyanNurse - 220507 - 073918
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READING PASSAGE 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on
Reading Passage 1 below.
The 16th and 17th centuries saw two great pioneers of modern science: Galileo and
Gilbert. The impact of their findings is eminent. Gilbert was the first modern scientist, also
the accredited father of the science of electricity and magnetism, an Englishman of
learning and a physician at the court of Elizabeth. Prior to him, all that was known of
electricity and magnetism was what the ancients knew, nothing more than that the
lodestone possessed magnetic properties and that amber and jet, when rubbed, would
attract bits of paper or other substances of small specific gravity. However, he is less well
known than he deserves.
Gilbert’s birth pre-dated Galileo. Born in an eminent local family in Colchester County in
the UK, on May 24, 1544, he went to grammar school, and then studied medicine at St
John’s College, Cambridge, graduating in 1573. Later he travelled in the continent and
eventually settled down in London.
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C
He was a very successful and eminent doctor. All this culminated in his election to the
president of the Royal Science Society. He was also appointed personal physician to the
Queen (Elizabeth I), and later knighted by the Queen. He faithfully served her until her
death. However, he didn’t outlive the Queen for long and died on November 30, 1603, only
a few months after his appointment as personal physician to King James.
Gilbert was first interested in chemistry but later changed his focus due to the large portion
of mysticism of alchemy involved (such as the transmutation of metal). He gradually
developed his interest in physics after the great minds of the ancient, particularly about the
knowledge the ancient Greeks had about lodestones, strange minerals with the power to
attract iron. In the meantime, Britain became a major seafaring nation in 1588 when the
Spanish Armada was defeated, opening the way to British settlement of America. British
ships depended on the magnetic compass, yet no one understood why it worked. Did the
Pole Star attract it, as Columbus once speculated; or was there a magnetic mountain at
the pole, as described in Odyssey, which ships would never approach, because the sailors
thought its pull would yank out all their iron nails and fittings? For nearly 20 years, William
Gilbert conducted ingenious experiments to understand magnetism. His works include On
the Magnet, Magnetic Bodies, and the Great Magnet of the Earth.
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orbit around the sun. However, he believed that stars are not equidistant from the earth
but have their own earth-like planets orbiting around them. The earth itself is like a giant
magnet, which is also why compasses always point north. They spin on an axis that is
aligned with the earth’s polarity. He even likened the polarity of the magnet to the polarity
of the earth and built an entire magnetic philosophy on this analogy. In his explanation,
magnetism is the soul of the earth. Thus a perfectly spherical lodestone, when aligned with
the earth’s poles, would wobble all by itself in 24 hours. Further, he also believed that the
sun and other stars wobble just like the earth does around a crystal core, and speculated
that the moon might also be a magnet caused to orbit by its magnetic attraction to the
earth. This was perhaps the first proposal that a force might cause a heavenly orbit.
His research method was revolutionary in that he used experiments rather than pure logic
and reasoning like the ancient Greek philosophers did. It was a new attitude towards
scientific investigation. Until then, scientific experiments were not in fashion. It was
because of this scientific attitude, together with his contribution to our knowledge of
magnetism, that a unit of magneto motive force, also known as magnetic potential, was
named Gilbert in his honour. His approach of careful observation and experimentation
rather than the authoritative opinion or deductive philosophy of others had laid the very
foundation for modern science.
Questions 1-7
Reading Passage 1 has seven paragraphs A-G.
Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number i-x in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
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List of headings
1 Paragraph A
2 Paragraph B
3 Paragraph C
4 Paragraph D
5 Paragraph E
6 Paragraph F
7 Paragraph G
Questions 8-10
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
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9 He was famous as a doctor before he was employed by the
Queen.
Questions 11-13
Choose THREE letters A-F.
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READING PASSAGE 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on
Reading Passage 2 below.
The three months of June, July and August were the warmest ever recorded in western
and central Europe, with record national highs in Portugal, Germany and Switzerland as
well as in Britain. And they were the warmest by a very long way. Over a great rectangular
block of the earth stretching from west of Paris to northern Italy, taking in Switzerland and
southern Germany, the average temperature for the summer months was 3.78°C above
the long-term norm, said the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia
in Norwich, which is one of the world's leading institutions for the monitoring and analysis
of temperature records.
That excess might not seem a lot until you are aware of the context - but then you realise it
is enormous. There is nothing like this in previous data, anywhere. It is considered so
exceptional that Professor Phil Jones, the CRU's director, is prepared to say openly - in a
way few scientists have done before - that the 2003 extreme may be directly attributed, not
to natural climate variability, but to global warming caused by human actions.
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Meteorologists have hitherto contented themselves with the formula that recent high
temperatures are “consistent with predictions” of climate change. For the great block of the
map - that stretching between 35-50N and 0-20E - the CRU has reliable temperature
records dating back to 1781. Using as a baseline the average summer temperature
recorded between 1961 and 1990, departures from the temperature norm, or “anomalies”,
over the area as a whole can easily be plotted. As the graph shows, such is the variability
of our climate that over the past 200 years, there have been at least half a dozen
anomalies, in terms of excess temperature - the peaks on the graph denoting very hot
years - approaching, or even exceeding, 2°C. But there has been nothing remotely like
2003, when the anomaly is nearly four degrees.
“This is quite remarkable,’ Professor Jones told The Independent. “It’s very unusual in a
statistical sense. If this series had a normal statistical distribution, you wouldn’t get this
number. The return period [how often it could be expected to recur] would be something
like one in a thousand years. If we look at an excess above the average of nearly four
degrees, then perhaps nearly three degrees of that is natural variability, because we’ve
seen that in past summers. But the final degree of it is likely to be due to global warming,
caused by human actions.”
The summer of 2003 has, in a sense, been one that climate scientists have long been
expecting. Until now, the warming has been manifesting itself mainly in winters that have
been less cold than in summers that have been much hotter. Last week, the United
Nations predicted that winters were warming so quickly that winter sports would die out in
Europe’s lower-level ski resorts. But sooner or later, the unprecedented hot summer was
bound to come, and this year it did.
One of the most dramatic features of the summer was the hot nights, especially in the first
half of August. In Paris, the temperature never dropped below 23°C (73.4°F) at all
between 7 and 14 August, and the city recorded its warmest-ever night on 11-12 August,
when the mercury did not drop below 25.5°C (77.9°F). Germany recorded its warmest-
ever night at Weinbiet in the Rhine Valley with a lowest figure of 27.6°C (80.6°F) on 13
August, and similar record-breaking nighttime temperatures were recorded in Switzerland
and Italy.
The 15,000 excess deaths in France during August, compared with previous years, have
been related to the high night-time temperatures. The number gradually increased during
the first 12 days of the month, peaking at about 2,000 per day on the night of 12-13
August, then fell off dramatically after 14 August when the minimum temperatures fell by
about 5°C. The elderly were most affected, with a 70 per cent increase in mortality rate in
those aged 75-94.
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For Britain, the year as a whole is likely to be the warmest ever recorded, but despite the
high temperature record on 10 August, the summer itself - defined as the June, July and
August period - still comes behind 1976 and 1995, when there were longer periods of
intense heat. “At the moment, the year is on course to be the third hottest ever in the
global temperature record, which goes back to 1856, behind 1998 and 2002, but when all
the records for October, November and December are collated, it might move into second
place/' Professor Jones said. The ten hottest years in the record have all now occurred
since 1990. Professor Jones is in no doubt about the astonishing nature of European
summer of 2003. “The temperatures recorded were out of all proportion to the previous
record," he said.
“It was the warmest summer in the past 500 years and probably way beyond that. It was
enormously exceptional."
His colleagues at the University of East Anglia's Tyndall Centre for Climate Change
Research are now planning a special study of it. “It was a summer that has not been
experienced before, either in terms of the temperature extremes that were reached, or the
range and diversity of the impacts of the extreme heat," said the centre's executive
director, Professor Mike Hulme.
“It will certainly have left its mark on a number of countries, as to how they think and plan
for climate change in the future, much as the 2000 floods have revolutionised the way the
Government is thinking about flooding in the UK. The 2003 heatwave will have similar
repercussions across Europe."
Questions 14-19
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage
2? In boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet write
Questions 20-21
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS
AND/OR NUMBERS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 20-21 on your answer sheet.
What are the other two hottest years in Britain besides 2003?
20
What has also influenced government policies like the hot summer in
2003? 21
Questions 22-25
Complete the summary below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from
the passage for each answer.
Question 26
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
Write your answer in box 26 on your answer sheet.
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A Global Warming
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READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on
Reading Passage 3 below.
Amateur Naturalists
From the results of an annual Alaskan betting contest to sightings of migratory
birds, ecologists are using a wealth of unusual data to predict the impact of climate
change.
A Tim Sparks slides a small leather-bound notebook out of an envelope. The book's
yellowing pages contain bee-keeping notes made between 1941 and 1969 by the late
Walter Coates of Kilworth, Leicestershire. He adds it to his growing pile of local journals,
birdwatchers' lists and gardening diaries. "We're uncovering about one major new record
each month," he says, "I still get surprised." Around two centuries before Coates, Robert
Marsham, a landowner from Norfolk in the east of England, began recording the life cycles
of plants and animals on his estate - when the first wood anemones flowered, the dates on
which the oaks burst into leaf and the rooks began nesting. Successive Marshams
continued compiling these notes for 211 years.
B Today, such records are being put to uses that their authors could not possibly have
expected. These data sets, and others like them, are proving invaluable to ecologists
interested in the timing of biological events, or phenology. By combining the records with
climate data, researchers can reveal how, for example, changes in temperature affect the
arrival of spring, allowing ecologists to make improved predictions about the impact of
climate change. A small band of researchers is combing through hundreds of years of
records taken by thousands of amateur naturalists. And more systematic projects have
also started up, producing an overwhelming response. "The amount of interest is almost
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frightening," says Sparks, a climate researcher at the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology in
Monks Wood, Cambridgeshire.
C Sparks first became aware of the army of "closet phenologists”, as he describes them,
when a retiring colleague gave him the Marsham records. He now spends much of his
time following leads from one historical data set to another. As news of his quest spreads,
people tip him off to other historical records, and more amateur phenologists come out of
their closets. The British devotion to recording and collecting makes his job easier - one
man from Kent sent him 30 years' worth of kitchen calendars, on which he had noted the
date that his neighbour's magnolia tree flowered.
D Other researchers have unearthed data from equally odd sources. Rafe Sagarin, an
ecologist at Stanford University in California, recently studied records of a betting contest
in which participants attempt to guess the exact time at which a specially erected wooden
tripod will fall through the surface of a thawing river. The competition has taken place
annually on the Tenana River in Alaska since 1917, and analysis of the results showed
that the thaw now arrives five days earlier than it did when the contest began.
E Overall, such records have helped to show that, compared with 20 years ago, a raft of
natural events now occur earlier across much of the northern hemisphere, from the
opening of leaves to the return of birds from migration and the emergence of butterflies
from hibernation. The data can also hint at how nature will change in the future. Together
with models of climate change, amateurs' records could help guide conservation. Terry
Root, an ecologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, has collected birdwatchers'
counts of wildfowl taken between 1955 and 1996 on seasonal ponds in the American
Midwest and combined them with climate data and models of future warming. Her analysis
shows that the increased droughts that the models predict could halve the breeding
populations at the ponds. "The number of waterfowl in North America will most probably
drop significantly with global warming," she says.
F But not all professionals are happy to use amateur data. "A lot of scientists won't touch
them, they say they're too full of problems," says Root. Because different observers can
have different ideas of what constitutes, for example, an open snowdrop. "The biggest
concern with ad hoc observations is how carefully and systematically they were taken,"
says Mark Schwartz of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, who studies the
interactions between plants and climate. "We need to know pretty precisely what a
person's been observing - if they just say 'I noted when the leaves came out', it might not
be that useful." Measuring the onset of autumn can be particularly problematic because
deciding when leaves change colour is a more subjective process than noting when they
appear.
G Overall, most phenologists are positive about the contribution that amateurs can make.
"They get at the raw power of science: careful observation of the natural world," says
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Sagarin. But the professionals also acknowledge the need for careful quality control. Root,
for example, tries to gauge the quality of an amateur archive by interviewing its collector.
"You always have to worry - things as trivial as vacations can affect measurement. I
disregard a lot of records because they're not rigorous enough," she says. Others suggest
that the right statistics can iron out some of the problems with amateur data. Together with
colleagues at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, environmental scientist Arnold
van Vliet is developing statistical techniques to account for the uncertainty in amateur
phenological data. With the enthusiasm of amateur phenologists evident from past
records, professional researchers are now trying to create standardised recording
schemes for future efforts. They hope that well-designed studies will generate a volume of
observations large enough to drown out the idiosyncrasies of individual recorders. The
data are cheap to collect, and can provide breadth in space, time and range of species.
"It's very difficult to collect data on a large geographical scale without enlisting an army of
observers," says Root.
H Phenology also helps to drive home messages about climate change. "Because the
public understand these records, they accept them," says Sparks.
It can also illustrate potentially unpleasant consequences, he adds, such as the finding
that more rat infestations are reported to local councils in warmer years. And getting
people involved is great for public relations. "People are thrilled to think that the data
they've been collecting as a hobby can be used for something scientific - it empowers
them," says Root.
Questions 27-33
Reading Passage 3 has eight paragraphs A-H.
Write the correct letter A-H in boxes 27-33 on your answer sheet.
32
Records of a competition providing clues to climate change
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33 A description of a very old record compiled by generations of
amateur naturalists
Questions 34-36
Complete the sentences below with NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from
the passage for each answer.
36
Questions 37-40
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
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How do the scientists suggest amateur data should be
39 used?
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Solution:
1 v 2 i
3 vi 4 x
5 ix 6 iv
7 ii 8 TRUE
11
13
C,D,E 14 YES
15 YES 16 NO
23 1990 24 1781
25 France 26 D
27 B 28 C
29 H 30 G
31 E 32 D
33 A 34 bee-keeping
37 C 38 A
39 D 40 D
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