阅读理解 What Are Tropical Storms? Severe storms spawned in the tropics are known by different names in different parts of the world: hurricanes in the Atlantic and east Pacific and typhoons in the northwest Pacific and cyclones in the southwest Pacific and Indian Ocean. These storms originate over tropical waters, close to the equator. If the atmosphere is calm and the water is warmer than about 27°C, evaporation forces large amounts of moisture into the air, creating a low pressure system. When this water vapor condenses, it releases heat that powers the circular winds that characterize these storms. Rainfall in the developing storm releases more heat, triggering a convection process that pulls more moisture-laden air up through the centre of the system. The storm grows via this feedback mechanism. The strongest winds are found immediately outside the centre, or "eye," of the hurricane at ground level. Every one of these systems begins as a tropical depression -- a system of thunder storms with an overall circular motion and maximum sustained winds less than 62 km/h. When a storm becomes severe enough and the winds pick up to more than 62 km/h, it is designated a tropical storm, When the winds reach 119 km/h, the system is called a hurricane, typhoon or cyclone. An average of 10 tropical storms develop over the Atlantic Ocean each year, of which about six become severe enough to be called hurricanes. Besides strong winds and heavy rain, these hurricanes also create a "storm surge," a massive wave beneath the centre of the storm. In the eye of the hurricane, air is sucked upward faster than it can rush in at the bottom. This lowers the atmospheric pressure under the eye of the storm; as a result, the eye tries to pull at the ocean itself, creating a bulge of water as much as six metres high that moves together with the storm. When is the hurricane season? Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 to November 30, but the most intense storms mainly occur between mid-August and mid-October. How are hurricanes classified? Tropical storms that get strong enough to be classified as hurricanes are categorized by the intensity of their wind speeds using the Saffir-Simpson scale. Only three Category 5 hurricanes have made landfall in the U.S. in the past century one that struck the Florida Keys in 1935, Hurricane Camille in 1969, and Hurricane Andrew in 1992. How are tropical storms named? A tropical storm is given a name if its winds reach a speed of 62 kilometres per hour. An international committee has drawn up a list of 126 names-half male and half female which are repeated after a six-year cycle. However, if a hurricane causes extensive dam age, its name is retired from use. So far, more than 50 names have been retired, from Hazel in 1954 to Juan in 2003. Memorable hurricanes In August and September 1992, Hurricane Andrew wrought havoc across the Caribbean and Florida. Andrew was an unusual storm-after brewing for several days at low latitudes, it weakened and nearly vanished about 600 km east of Puerto Rico. But the storm regained its strength and moved northward with devastating results. Andrew left 17,000 people homeless in Florida alone and destroyed or badly damaged 85,000 homes. The storm caused a record $ 26. S billion US in property damage. In 2002 Andrew, initially classified a Force 4, was upgraded to have actually been a Force 5 storm. ●In November 1998, Hurricane Mitch tore through Central America, killing as many as 10,000 people and leaving two million homeless in Nicaragua and Honduras. The storm''s 300 km/h winds and heavy rains caused more than $ 3 billion US in damage more than half the combined gross domestic product of those two countries. Mitch also unleashed deadly landslides, and caused the worst flooding in the region in 200 years. In the storm''s wake, with roads and infrastructure wiped out, thousands of people developed illnesses such as dengue fever, cholera and malaria. ●Hurricane Hugo swept across the Caribbean and the southeast U.S. in September 1989, leaving a 3,700-kilometre-long trail of destruction from Guadeloupe to the Carolinas. The storm killed at. least 28 people in the Caribbean, left up to 80,000 homeless and caused $ 2 billion US in damage. In the U. S. , it killed another 11 people and caused more than $ 750 million in damage. The storm sent giant waves crashing onto the U. S. Eastern Seaboard, with a wall of water some five metres in height washing over Charleston, S.C. ●In September 1996, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada, felt the wrath of Hurricane Hortense. The storm brought 120 km/h winds and caused $ 3 million in damages, mostly due to flooding, wind damage and power outages. ● For Ontarians old enough to remember it, Hurricane Hazel was the storm of a life time-and one of the few to inflict significant damage in central Canada. Hurricane Hazel formed in early October 1954 and crossed the Caribbean and the eastern U. S. before entering southern Ontario. The storm left as many as 1,000 dead in Haiti, six more in the Bahamas, another 95 in the U.S. and 81 in the Toronto region Tropical storms and global climate trends While tropical storms seem to follow certain natural cycles, scientists are concerned about the effects of global warming and tong-term climate change. On Sept. 15, 1999, the United Nations issued a report predicting that global warming will cause more frequent and more severe tropical storms, floods and tornadoes in the coming century. "We do know that hurricane intensity is directly correlated to how warm the ocean waters are," says Petersen "And if global warming continues to occur, and this results in warmer water temperatures, then we''ll see an undeniable signal of stronger hurricanes."
单选题 The passage gives an overview of hurricanes and their history.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】本题属于主旨题,答案存在于文章题目和小标题中,通过观察会发现,history of hurricanes是文章的一个部分,其他的部分讨论的是hurricane本身,则该题符合原文。
单选题 Hurricanes in the Atlantic are different from typhoons and cyclones in Asia.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】线索词汇为专有名词Atlantic,typhoons,cyclones以及地名Asia。定位到文章第一句话:“热带地区的风暴因地域不同,名称也不尽相同”,所以hurricanes,typhoons and cyclones都是指同一事物。
单选题 Most tropical storms do not become hurricanes.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】线索词汇为most tropical storms,定位后发现在第4段首句:“平均每年大西洋中会形成10个热带风暴,其中有6个会增强至飓风。”从数量比较关系上看,和题目中说的“多数都不会形成飓风”不符,所以该题为N。
单选题 There will not be another Hurricane Andrew in the foreseeable future.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】词汇线索为专有名词 Hurricane Andrew,定位在小标题memorable hurricanes之下的段落中,发现HA被描述为“unusual”,则在以后不大可能出现,故该题为Y。
单选题 Hurricane Miteh was a Force 5 storm that hit the United States.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】词汇线索为Hurricane Mitch,Force 5,United States。根据HM定位,找到段落后发现地名Central America,仔细观察后和 United States不符,前者指的是中美洲。
单选题 Hurricane Hugo was weaker when it hit the United States than when it hit the Caribbean islands.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】根据Hurricane Hugo定位,找到段落后发现了两句话包含了地名United States和Caribbean,且前后二者只是在伤亡人数和经济损失上给出了具体的数字,却无法直接推断进入美国后该飓风的强度有所减弱,但这个命题又未抵触原文,所以该题为NG。
单选题 The United Nations believes that the only way to prevent worse hurricanes is to deal with global warming.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】根据专有名词UN定位,在文章末段中寻找global warming,同义转述后发现和题目的意思相同,所以答案为Y。
填空题 A 1 is one whereby water is released as rainfall, generating heat, and causes water vapour to be pulled into the storm to replace it.
填空题 Wind speeds generally fall the further you are from the 1.
填空题 A 1 is a body of water pulled upwards in the centre of a hurricane.