阅读理解

Directions: In this section there are reading passages followed by multiple-choice questions. Read the passages and then mark your answers on your answer sheet. 

Passage B

Agriculture and fishing formed the primary sector of the economy in the Netherlands in the seventeenth century. Dutch agriculture was modernized and commercialized new crops and agricultural techniques raised levels of production so that they were in line with market demands, and cheap grain was imported annually from the Baltic region in large quantities. According to estimates, about 120, 000 tons of imported grain fed about 600, 000 people; that is about a third of the Dutch population. Importing the grain, which would have been expensive and time consuming for the Dutch to have produced themselves, kept the price of grain low and thus simulated individual demand for other food stuffs and consumer goods. 

Apart from this, being able to give up labor-intensive grain production freed both the land and the workforce for more productive agricultural divisions. The peasants specialized in Livestock husbandry and dairy farming as well as in cultivating industrial crops and fodder crops: flax, madder, and rape were grown, as were tobacco, hops, and turnips. These products were bought mostly by urban businesses. There was also a demand among urban consumers for dairy products, such as butter and cheese, which, in the sixteenth century, had become more expensive than grain. The high prices encouraged the peasants to improve their animal husbandry techniques; for example, they began feeding their animals indoors in order to raise the milk yield of their cows. 

In addition to dairy farming and cultivating crops, a third sector of the Dutch economy reflected the way in which agriculture was being modernized horticulture. In the sixteenth century, fruit and vegetables were to be found only in gardens belonging to wealthy people. This changed in the early part of the seventeenth century when horticulture became accepted as an agricultural sector. Whole villages began to cultivate fruit and vegetables. The produce was then transported by water to markets in the cities, where the consumption of fruit and vegetables was no longer restricted to the wealthy. 

As the demand for agricultural produce from both consumers and industry increased, agricultural land became more valuable and people tried to work the available land more intensively and to reclaim more land from wetlands and lakes. In order to increase production on existing land, the peasants made more use of crop rotation and, in particular, began to apply animal waste to the soil regularly, rather than leaving the fertilization process up to the grazing livestock. For the first time industrial waste such as ash from the soap-boilers, was collected in the cities and sold in the country as artificial fertilizer. The increased yield and price of land justified reclaiming and draining even more land. 

The Dutch battle against the sea is legendary. Noorderkwariter in Holland, with its numerous lakes and stretches of water, was particularly suitable for land reclamation and one of the biggest projects undertaken there was the draining of the Beemster lake which began in 1608. The richest merchants in Amsterdam contributed money to reclaim a good 7, 100 hectares of land. Forty-three windmills powered the drainage pumps so that they were able to lease the reclamation to farmers as early as 1612, with the investors receiving annual leasing payments at an interest rate of 17 percent. Land reclamation continued, and between 1590 and 1665 almost 100, 000 hectares were reclaimed from the wetland areas of Holland, Zeeland, and Friesland. However, land reclamation decreased significantly after the middle of the seventeenth century because the price of agricultural products began to fall, making land reclamation far less profitable in the second part of the century. 

Dutch agriculture was finally affected by the general agricultural crisis in Europe during the last two decades of the seventeenth century. However, what is astonishing about this is not that Dutch agriculture was affected by critical phenomena such as a decrease in sales and production, but the fact that the crisis appeared only relatively late in Dutch agriculture. In Europe as a whole, the exceptional reduction in the population and the related fall in demand for grain since the beginning of the seventeenth century had caused the price of agricultural products to fall. Dutch peasants were able to remain unaffected by this crisis for a long fine because they had specialized in dairy farming industrial crops, and horticulture. However, toward the end of the seventeenth century, they too were, overtaken by the general agricultural crisis.

单选题 By indicating that production was “in line with market demands” in paragraph 1, the author means that Dutch farmers were able to _____.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】以market demands做关键词定位至第二句, 说农业现代化, commercialized的作物和先进的agricultural technique使得产量升高, 从而可以满足市场的需要, 因此这些人满足市场需要的原因是作物的产量高。
单选题 According to paragraph 2, the increases demands on Dutch agriculture made by urban consumers had which of the following results?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】以urban consumers做关键词定位至倒数第二句, 说城市消费者需要奶制品, 而奶制品比谷物价格贵得多, 但这句只说了现象, 没说结果, 往下看。 说高价使农民改善了牲畜饲养方式。
单选题 According to paragraph 3, the modernization of agriculture in the Netherlands was evident in all of the following ways EXCEPT_____.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】本段中说到, 16世纪时只有在富人拥有的花园 里有蔬菜和水果, 而17世纪时园 艺业出现, 农村种的蔬菜水果被运到城市, 在城市并不只有富人消费蔬菜水果。 但B项中的“富人不种蔬菜水果改种花” 并没有提到。
单选题 According to paragraph 5, which of the following was an important reason why land-reclamation projects in the first half of the seventeenth century proceeded rapidly?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】第二句讲到Noorderkwariter这个地方特别适合开垦土地,又说最大的工程是1608年排Beemster lake的水, 但一直都没说原因。 下一句说阿姆斯特丹的富商给了钱, 这正是land reclamation的原因。
单选题 Which of the following best describes the organization of the passage?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】第一段讲到荷兰为符合市场需求, 进行了农业的现代化、商业化、 农业技术的改善。 第二段到第五段都是举例说明17世纪荷兰农业的这三项特点, 包括将种植的农作物和生产的奶制品卖给主要消费者(城市消费者) 、 将蔬菜水果卖给城市消费者、 改善畜牧方式等等。 第六段讲的是17世纪末席卷欧洲的农业危机最终也波及到了荷兰, 属于有关欧洲农业发展状况的细节阐 述。