完形填空 A. Created 150 years ago, the Periodic Table (元素周期表) is a triumph of form and function. Now this design classic has been updated for the 21st century—and opened up to a new audience. It's a vital part of chemistry teachers' educational content. With its array of digits and chemical abbreviations, it appears everywhere, from pencil cases to posters.
    B. So why are we still so interested in the periodic table? 'The standard physicists' criticism of chemists is that they are stamp collectors,' says periodic table expert and 'The Elements' creator Theodore Gray. 'That's because physicists think they study the fundamentals of what makes everything work. In their view, chemists just collect all of these manifestations of physics—the physical properties of elements-and don't concern themselves with what makes these things the way they are.'
    C. But scientists, always eager to eke out a closer model of the truth, have been trying to improve it for 150 years. Amateur enthusiasts obsessed by the table's design, have transferred Mendeleyev-inspired charts onto T-shirts, even toy elephants. It's no coincidence that iPad champion-in-chief Stephen Fry has described the new 'Elements' iPad App as alone worth the gadget's retail price. Released in Britain last month, the App's creators hope this country will take to it like the Americans, who have already bought 30, 000 copies.
    D. Whether you love chemistry or not, the modern periodic table, first successfully mapped out by Russian academic Mendeleyev in 1869, occupies a space in science-lovers' psyches. This traditional chart has persisted because of its efficient systematisation of a disparate array of elements.
    E. Mendeleyev's brain wave in fact followed on from hundreds of years of scientific research. In 1862 a French geologist, Alexandre de Chancourtois, had written a list of elements on a piece of tape, which he then wound around a cylinder. He noticed that chemically similar elements came below one another-in other words, the elements were 'periodic'—and that as they grew in size, their properties repeated with regularity.
    F. 'But stamp collecting is a very popular hobby. It's fun to collect things. And the periodic table has a nice number of elements: around 100. It's a good number, and fits well with, say, a collection of beer or vegetables, which people have categorised using the periodic table's principles online. Also, people love it because it's universally known. It's like the Nike logo—everyone is familiar with its shape.'
    G. Around this time, in Russia Mendeleyev was throwing his intellectual heft behind the problem too. He wrote each of the elements on a different piece of card, along with their atomic weight and the formula (分子式) of their compound with oxygen (their 'oxide'). He arranged the cutouts in order of weight, putting similar oxides in rows.
    Order: A→    41        42        43        44        45    →G
问答题    
 
【正确答案】D。
【答案解析】文章第一段引入了元素周期表,第二段应该介绍元素周期表。浏览各个选项,只有D选项是介绍元素周期表的,故正确答案为D选项。
问答题    
 
【正确答案】C。
【答案解析】第二段最后说,这个传统的图表,因将一大堆性质迥异的化学元素进行了高效的系统化而流传至今。这句话的关键词是“传统”与“至今”。纵观各选项,C选项首句指出,然而科学家们总是热切希望能得出一个更加接近真理的模型。这句话的意思就是要对传统的元素周期表进行改革,符合逻辑顺序,故正确答案为C选项。
问答题    
 
【正确答案】B。
【答案解析】第三段指出,业余爱好者们将Mendeleyev的图表印制在T恤上,又有人将元素周期表开发成软件,并且这一软件在美国已经卖出了3万套,这些都表明元素周期表十分受欢迎。而B选项首句指出,那么我们为什么仍然对元素周期表如此着迷呢?可知B选项即将描述第三段中的现象的原因,故B选项符合上下文间的逻辑。
问答题    
 
【正确答案】F。
【答案解析】第四段提到,物理学家对化学家最典型的批评,就是化学家都是集邮爱好者。选项F首句就指出,集邮是一个非常普遍的爱好,这与前一段相互呼应,故正确答案为F选项。
问答题    
 
【正确答案】E。
【答案解析】前几段指出,物理学家对化学家最典型的批评,就是化学家都是集邮爱好者。而究竟是什么原因使得Mendeleyev有如此妙想呢?答案就在E选项中。