填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
You are going to read a list of headings and a text
about Amazonia. Choose the most suitable heading from the list A-F for each
numbered paragraph (41-45). The first and last paragraphs of the text are not
numbered. There is one extra heading which you do not need to use. Mark your
answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
[A] Assumed inhospitableness to social development
[B] Price paid for
misconceptions
[C] Evolutionary adaptation to forest ecology
[D] False
believes revised
[E] Extreme impoverishment and backwardness
[F] Ignorance
of early human impact
In 1942 Allan R Holmberg, a doctoral
student in anthropology from Yale University, USA, ventured deep into the jungle
of Bolivian Amazonia and searched out an isolated band of Siriono Indians. The
researcher described the primitive society as a desperate struggle for survival,
a view of Amazonia being fundamentally reconsidered today.
41.
____________
The Siriono, Holmberg wrote, led a "strikingly
backward" existence. Their villages were little more than clusters of thatched
huts. Life itself was a perpetual and punishing search for food: some families
grew manioc and other starchy crops in small garden plots cleared from the
forest, while other members of the tribe scoured the country for small game and
promising fish holes. When local re-
sources became depleted, the tribe moved
on. As for technology, Holmberg noted, the Siriono "may be classified among the
most handicapped peoples of the world". Other than bows, arrows and crude
digging sticks, the only tools the Siriono seemed to possess were "two machetes
worn to the size of pocket-knives".
42. ____________
Although the lives of the Siriono have changed in the intervening decades,
the image of them as Stone Age relics has endured. To casual observers, as well
as to influential natural scientists and regional planners, the luxuriant
forests of Amazonia seem ageless, unconquerable, a habitat totally hostile to
human civilization. The apparent simplicity of Indian ways of life has been
judged an evolutionary adaptation to forest ecology, living proof that Amazonia
could not—and cannot—sustain a more complex society. Archaeological traces of
far more elaborate cultures have been dismissed as the ruins of invaders from
outside the region, abandoned to decay in the uncompromising tropical
environment.
43. ____________
The popular
conception of Amazonia and its native residents would be enormously
consequential if it were true. But the human history of Amazonia in the past
11,000 years betrays that view as myth. Evidence gathered in recent years from
anthropology and archaeology indicates that the region has supported a series of
indigenous cultures for eleven thousand years; an extensive network of complex
societies—some with populations perhaps as large as 100,000—thrived there for
more than 1,000 years before the arrival of Europeans. Far from being
evolutionarily retarded, prehistoric Amazonian people developed technologies and
cultures that were advanced for their time. If the lives of Indians today seem
"primitive", the appearance is not the result of some environmental adaptation
or ecological barrier; rather it is a comparatively recent adaptation to
centuries of economic and political pressure.
44.
____________
The evidence for a revised view of Amazonia will
take many people by surprise. Ecologists have assumed that tropical ecosystems
were shaped entirely by natural forces and they have focused their research on
habitats they believe have escaped human influence. But as the University of
Florida ecologist, Peter Feinsinger, has noted, an approach that leaves people
out of the equation is no longer tenable. The archaeological evidence shows that
the natural history of Amazonia is to a surprising extent tied to the activities
of its prehistoric inhabitants.
45. ____________
The realization comes none too soon. In June 1992 political and
environmental leaders from across the world met in Rio de Janeiro to discuss how
developing countries can advance their economies without destroying their
natural resources. The challenge is especially difficult in Amazonia. Because
the tropical forest has been depicted as ecologically unfit for large-scale
human occupation, some environmentalists have opposed development of any kind.
Ironically, one major casualty of that extreme position has been the environment
itself. While policy makers struggle to define and implement appropriate
legislation, development of the most destructive kind has continued apace over
vast areas.
The other major casualty of the "naturalism" of
environmental scientists has been the indigenous Amazonians, whose habits of
hunting, fishing, and slash-and-burn cultivation often have been represented as
harmful to the habitat. In the clash between environmentalists and developers,
the Indians have suffered the most. The new understanding of the pre-history of
Amazonia, however, points toward a middle ground. Archaeology makes clear that
with judicious management selected parts of the region could support more people
than anyone thought before. The long-buried past, it seems, offers hope for the
future.