Climate change reveals ancient artefacts in Norway's glaciers
A Well above the treeline in Norway's highest mountains, ancient fields of ice are shrinking as Earth's climate warms. As the ice has vanished, it has been giving up the treasures it has preserved in cold storage for the last 6,000 years - items such as ancient arrows and skis from Viking Age* traders. And those artefacts have provided archaeologists with some surprising insights into how ancient Norwegians made their livings.
B Organic materials like textiles and hides are relatively rare finds at archaeological sites. This is because unless they're protected from the microorganisms that cause decay,they tend not to last long. Extreme cold is one reliable way to keep artefacts relatively fresh for a few thousand years, but once thawed out, these materials experience degradation relatively swiftly.
With climate change shrinking ice cover around the world, glacial archaeologists need to race the clock to find newly revealed artefacts, preserve them, and study them. If something fragile dries and is windblown it might very soon be lost to science, or an arrow might be exposed and then covered again by the next snow and remain well-preserved. The unpredictability means that glacial archaeologists have to be systematic in their approach to fieldwork.
C Over a nine-year period, a team of archaeologists, which included Lars Pilø of Oppland County Council,Norway,and James Barrett of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research,surveyed patches of ice in Oppland, an area of south-central Norway that is home to some of the country's highest mountains. Reindeer once congregated on these icy patches in the later summer months to escape biting insects, and from the late Stone Age**,hunters followed. In addition,trade routes threaded through the mountain passes of Oppland, linking settlements in Norway to the rest of Europe.
The slow but steady movement of glaciers tends to destroy anything at their bases, so the team focused on stationary patches of ice, mostly above 1,400 metres. That ice is found amid fields of frost-weathered boulders, fallen rocks, and exposed bedrock that for nine months of the year is buried beneath snow.
“Fieldwork is hard work - hiking with all our equipment, often camping on permafrost - but very rewarding. You're rescuing the archaeology, bringing the melting ice to wider attention, discovering a unique environmental history and really connecting with the natural environment,'says Barrett.
D At the edges of the contracting ice patches, archaeologists found more than 2,000 artefacts,which formed a material record that ran from 4,000 BCE to the beginnings of the Renaissance in the 14th century. Many of the artefacts are associated with hunting. Hunters would have easily misplaced arrows and they often discarded broken bows rather than take them all the way home. Other items could have been used by hunters traversing the high mountain passes of Oppland:all-purpose items like tools,skis,and horse tack.
E Barrett's team radiocarbon-dated 153 of the artefacts and compared those dates to the timing of major environmental changes in the region - such as periods of cooling or warming -and major social and economic shifts - such as the growth of farming settlements and the spread of international trade networks leading up to the Viking Age. They found that some periods had produced lots of artefacts, which indicates that people had been pretty active in the mountains during those times. But there were few or no signs of activity during other periods.
F What was surprising,according to Barrett,was the timing of these periods. Oppland's mountains present daunting terrain and in periods of extreme cold, glaciers could block the higher mountain passes and make travel in the upper reaches of the mountains extremely difficult. Archaeologists assumed people would stick to lower elevations during a time like the Late Antique Little Ice Age,a short period of deeper-than-usual cold from about 536-600 CE. But it turned out that hunters kept regularly venturing into the mountains even when the climate turned cold,based on the amount of stuff they had apparently dropped there.
'Remarkably, though, the finds from the ice may have continued through this period, perhaps suggesting that the importance of mountain hunting increased to supplement failing agricultural harvests in times of low temperatures,' says Barrett. A colder turn in the Scandinavian climate would likely have meant widespread crop failures, so more people would have depended on hunting to make up for those losses.
G Many of the artefacts Barrett's team recovered date from the beginning of the Viking Age, the 700s through to the 900s CE. Trade networks connecting Scandinavia with Europe and the Middle East were expanding around this time. Although we usually think of ships when we think of Scandinavian expansion, these recent discoveries show that plenty of goods travelled on overland routes, like the mountain passes of Oppland. And growing Norwegian towns,along with export markets,would have created a booming demand for hides to fight off the cold,as well as antlers to make useful things like combs. Business must have been good for hunters.
H Norway's mountains are probably still hiding a lot of history-and prehistory-in remote ice patches. When Barrett's team looked at the dates for their sample of 153 artefacts, they noticed a gap with almost no artefacts from about 3,800 to 2,200 BCE. In fact, archaeological finds from that period are rare all over Norway. The researchers say that could be because many of those artefacts have already disintegrated or are still frozen in the ice. That means archaeologists could be extracting some of those artefacts from retreating ice in years to come.
Question 23-24
Choose Two letters, A-E
Write the correct letters in boxes 23 and 24 on your answer sheet.
Which TWO of the following statements does the writer make about the discoveries of Barrett's team?
定位词:Barrett's team
文中对应点:E段最后一句、F段最后一句
题目解析:
A:在更高的山口发现的物品仅限于滑雪设备;
B:即使是在极端寒冷的时期,猎人也会进入山里;
C:某些时期的文物数量相对较少;
D:文物的放射性碳年代测定得出了一些不可靠的结果;
E: 在Oppland发现的文物比其他任何山地都多。
根据E段倒数两句可知,Barrett的团队发现在一些特定的时期,人们会更活跃,制作更多的手工制品。而在其他时间,则只有很少或者没有活动迹象。对应到C选项;
根据F段最后一句,可知猎人会定期进山,即使有时候气候转冷。对应到B选项;因此答案为BC。
Which TWO of the following statements does the writer make about the discoveries of Barrett's team?
定位词:Barrett's team
文中对应点:E段最后一句、F段最后一句
题目解析:
A:在更高的山口发现的物品仅限于滑雪设备;
B:即使是在极端寒冷的时期,猎人也会进入山里;
C:某些时期的文物数量相对较少;
D:文物的放射性碳年代测定得出了一些不可靠的结果;
E: 在Oppland发现的文物比其他任何山地都多。
根据E段倒数两句可知,Barrett的团队发现在一些特定的时期,人们会更活跃,制作更多的手工制品。而在其他时间,则只有很少或者没有活动迹象。对应到C选项;
根据F段最后一句,可知猎人会定期进山,即使有时候气候转冷。对应到B选项;因此答案为BC。
Question 25-26
Choose Two letters, A-E
Write the correct letters in boxes 25 and 26 on your answer sheet.
Which TWO of the following statements does the writer make about the Viking Age?
定位词:Viking Age
文中对应点:G段
题目解析:
A :在此期间猎人们受益于商品需求的增加;
B:这一时期的开始见证了维京人财富的最大增长;
C:维京人并不仅仅依靠船只来运输货物;
D:挪威的城镇在此期间吸引了世界各地的商人;
E:维京人主要对他们与中东的贸易练习感兴趣;
在G段第四行可以看到,这些最近的发现表明很多的货物是通过陆路运输的,对应C选项;
在G段最后两句中可以看到,挪威城镇和出口市场的发展促进了对兽皮和鹿角的需求迅速增长,猎人们的生意一定很好,对应到A选项;
因此答案为AC。
Which TWO of the following statements does the writer make about the Viking Age?
定位词:Viking Age
文中对应点:G段
题目解析:
A :在此期间猎人们受益于商品需求的增加;
B:这一时期的开始见证了维京人财富的最大增长;
C:维京人并不仅仅依靠船只来运输货物;
D:挪威的城镇在此期间吸引了世界各地的商人;
E:维京人主要对他们与中东的贸易练习感兴趣;
在G段第四行可以看到,这些最近的发现表明很多的货物是通过陆路运输的,对应C选项;
在G段最后两句中可以看到,挪威城镇和出口市场的发展促进了对兽皮和鹿角的需求迅速增长,猎人们的生意一定很好,对应到A选项;
因此答案为AC。