填空题In the following article, some paragraphs have been removed. For Questions
66 to 70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the list A-F to fit into each
of the numbered gaps. There is one paragraph which does not fit in any of the
gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
One day a group of people walked into a cave and painted handprints all over the
walls. Ten thousand years later, archaeologists have no idea why.
{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}} But this is
the kind of challenge now facing a group of scientists, historians and futurists
who are trying to send a message to the people of the distant future. In what
has been called the first ever attempt at "reverse archaeology", they are
designing a sign that will last at least 10,000 years. The message: Don't dig
here, we buried nuclear waste. The repository in question, the
Waste Isolation Pilot Project, or WIPP, was constructed in the 1970s and 80s in
a disused salt mine near Carlsbad, New Mexico. In 1999, it became the first
underground repository in the world licensed to house waste from the production
of nuclear weapons. Once it reaches full capacity in 2033, it will be monitored
by the US Department of Energy for 1000 years before being abandoned. Computer
models predict that within 1000 years the mine will collapse in on itself,
sealing the chemical sludge, toxic waste and contaminated lab equipment
inside. {{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}
This is a major challenge. In 10,000 years our descendants may have no
recollection of our culture, languages or technologies. They may be more
technologically advanced than we can imagine, or civilisation as we know it may
have long since crashed and burned. Clearly the survival of the
WIPP message depends on more than paper or digital records. Maps and technical
details will be stored in libraries around the world, but the warning signs on
the site itself will need to be big, obvious and permanent. They will need to
survive over thousands of years without eroding, being looted or being destroyed
by vandals. {{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}}
{{/U}} But making sure the message remains legible is only half
the battle. It will also need to be understood, and, equally critically,
believed. This is where things get tricky. Chances are the people of the future
will no longer use language in the same way that we do. Even if they do use the
spoken and written word to communicate, there is no guarantee their language
will bear any relation to ours. In the early 1990s, Nelson
gathered two teams of historians, anthropologists and semiotic-ians—experts in
signs—and challenged them to come up with the perfect warning sign.
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Anthropologists say there is no universal symbol that will convey danger
to any human past, present or future. Interpretations of colours vary between
cultures, and while depictions of animals like spiders and snakes may inspire
fear, they don't tell you what you should be frightened of.
{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}} So if the symbols
no longer mean anything to our descendants, will the two faces be enough to get
the message across? "Both are relevant, I suppose," says Robert Aunger,
"although we argue that disgust is a response to threat only of infectious
disease; radioactivity is not contagious. Fear is more relevant than disgust."
Barring extreme genetic modification, chances are faces will look much the same
in 10,000 years. A. All things going well it should stay that
way for the 250,000 years it will take for most of the waste to become safe.
However, according to legislation drawn up in 1985 by the US Department of
Energy, a repository must be safeguarded for at least 10,000 years, and that
means it must be marked. B. All we know is that nuclear waste
is dangerous now and is likely to stay that way for a very long time, and that
means we have to try. C. To be fair to the artists in question,
they probably didn't set out to create something that would make sense in 400
generations' time. Even if thoughts of the future had crossed their minds, how
could they possibly have imagined what would have become of the human race?
Since that day, mankind has invented the wheel, developed hundreds of languages
and got through several major civilisations, not to mention remodelled the
planet and its climate. D. Facial expressions, though, are
universally understood. "Fear is the most basic of emotions, and so would
survive any cultural evolution," says Robert Aunger, a biological
anthropologist. With this in mind, the WIPP designers came up with two symbols:
a human face showing fear and another showing revulsion and disgust. There will
also be a description of the site in seven languages, plus the word "Danger" and
today's symbols for biohazards and radioactivity. E. The
biggest challenge was choosing an image. Symbols do exist to illustrate
radiation and biohazards, but symbols have a habit of changing their meanings
over time. The swastika, for example, was first used by European tribes in
4000BC and was a Hindu holy symbol long before the Nazis got hold of
it. F. The plan is literally to set the warnings in stone, by
carving them onto 8-metre-tall monoliths. A study of ancient rock carvings
commissioned by WIPP in 2000 found that deep carvings on basalt survived well,
as, surprisingly, did those on sandstone. The team is now testing other rock
types against freeze/thaw cracking and wind abrasion, as well as working on
cheaper artificial alternatives.