广东省广州市2022届高三上学期10月阶段训练(调研)英语试题 WORD版含答案.doc
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1、秘密启用前 试卷类型:A广州市2022届高三年级阶段训练英语2021.10本试卷共 10 页,满分 120 分。考试用时 120 分钟。注意事项:1. 答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、考生号、试室号、座位号填写在答题卡上。用2B铅笔将试卷类型(A)填涂在答题卡相应位置上,并在答题卡相应位置上填涂考生号。因笔试不考听力,试卷从第二部分开始,试题序号从“21”开始。2. 作答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用2B铅笔把答题卡对应题目选项的答案信息点涂黑;如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案。答案不能答在试卷上。3. 非选择题必须用黑色字迹的钢笔或签字笔作答,答案必须写在答题卡各题目指定区域内相应位置
2、上;如需改动,先划掉原来的答案,然后再写上新答案;不准使用铅笔和涂改液。不按以上要求作答无效。4. 考生必须保证答题卡的整洁。考试结束后,将试卷和答题卡一并交回。第一部分 阅读(共两节, 满分 50 分)第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 2.5 分,满分 37.5 分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D 四个选项中选出最佳选项。ASmokejumpersEvery year, wildfires destroy millions of hectares of forest. Homes are damaged, and thousands of people die. Smokejumpe
3、rs are helping to stop this.What is a smokejumper?Smokejumpers are a special type of firefighter. They jump from planes into areas that are difficult to reach by car or on foot, like the middle of a mountain forest. They race to put out fires as fast as they can.What do smokejumpers do?At a fire sit
4、e, smokejumpers first examine the land and decide how to fight the fire. Their main goal is to stop a fire from spreading. Using basic equipment such as shovels and axes, smokejumpers clear land of burnable material like plants and other dry material. They carry water with them too, but only a limit
5、ed amount.Who can be a smokejumper?Although I the majority of smokejumpers are men, more women are joining Most important are your height and weight. Smokejumpers employed in the U. s, for example, must be 120 to 200 pounds (54 to 91 kilograms), so they dont get hurt when they land, or get blown by
6、strong winds. Smokejumpers must also be capable of surviving in the wildness.The work is dangerous, and the hours are long. But for these firefighters, smokejumping isnt just an occupation. They love being able to jump out of planes, fight fires, and live in the forest. As 28-year-old smokejumper Bo
7、b Smith says, “This is the best job for tough guys.”21. What is the first thing a smokejumper does after arriving at a fire sit?A. Clear the land.B. Study the area.C. Look for water.D. Put out the fire.22. If you want to be a smokejumper, you must be _.A. maleB. within a certain weight rangeC. able
8、to fly a planeD. older than 28 years of age23. From which website would you most probably find this text?A. all-occupations.orgB. what-is-C. D. adventuretours.orgBUnder the first full moon of the year, music lovers in Norway sit on seats made of ice and covered with animal skins. On a frozen stage,
9、musicians in furry hats and coats play instruments, carved from ice! This show is the Ice Music Festival, the only concert in the world of its kind. This cool idea began in 1999, when musician Terje Isungset played music inside a frozen waterfall. The amazing sounds that he heard led him to start us
10、ing ice as a musical instrument. Isungset spent years experimenting with ice instruments. The more he learned, the more excited he became. After years of trial and error, he was ready to start the Ice Music Festival in 2016.To prepare the frozen instruments, Isungset hunts for the best natural sourc
11、es of ice. He tests each source of ice by cutting out a piece, tapping it with his finger, and listening to the sound it produces. Experience tells him whether the ice will make a good instrument. He prefers not to use human-made ice, because he believes frozen lake water sounds better. This may be
12、supported by science. Scientists have noticed that natural ice has fewer bubbles (气泡), which could lead to a clearer sound.Once the ice has been soured, professional ice carvers use tools to create instruments. They carve everything from saxophones to xylophones. The carvers often change the look of
13、 the instruments, which helps them produce special, even unique, sounds. Each year, the goal of the festival is to challenge musicians to make creative music when playing these one-of-a-kind ice instruments. Playing the frozen instruments is a challenge. Each performance surprises both the musicians
14、 and the audience. After the concert is over, Isungset jokes that the musicians will drink their instruments. Actually, they just leave their stage and instruments behind, giving it all back to nature.24. What inspired Isungsets interest in ice music?A. Learning to play an ice instrument.B. Attendin
15、g the first Ice Music Festival,C. Playing music in a frozen environment.D. Experimenting with frozen instruments.25. How does Isungset choose the best ice?A. By testing the sound that it makes.B. By referring to scientific explanations.C. By comparing the sources of ice pieces.D. By checking the num
16、ber of bubbles it has.26. What is the biggest challenge faced by ice music musicians?A. Playing in such cold weather.B. Getting rid of their instruments.C. Selecting their instruments look.D. Predicting their instruments sounds.27. Whats the purpose of the text?A. To promote the talents of Terje Isu
17、ngset.B. To review a recently-held music festival.C. To introduce a new and original type of music.D. To encourage people to join in the Ice Music Festival.CAfter years of heated debate, gray wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park in 1995. Fourteen wolves were caught in Canada and tra
18、nsported to the park. By 2007, the Yellowstone wolf population had grown to more than 170.Gray wolves once roamed throughout the Yellowstone area. But they were gradually displaced by human development and hunted by farmers for killing livestock (牲畜) By the 1920s, wolves had practically disappeared
19、from the Yellowstone area. They moved farther north into the deep forests of Canada, where there was less contact with humans.The disappearance of the wolves had many consequences. Deer populationa major food source for the wolfgrew rapidly without their usual enemy. These animals consumed large amo
20、unts of vegetation, which reduced plant diversity in the park. In the absence of wolves, coyote (小野狼) populations also grew quickly. The coyotes killed a large percentage of the parks red foxes.As early as 1966, biologists asked the government to consider reintroducing wolves into Yellowstone, hopin
21、g that they would be able to control the deer and coyote problems. Many farmers opposed the plan, worrying that wolves would kill their livestock or pets. Other people feared that the wolves would not be well-protected in Yellowstone.The government spent nearly 30 years coming up with a plan to rein
22、troduce the wolves. They included many compromises to help people accept the wolves presence. For example, they promised to pay farmers for livestock killed by wolves.The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service carefully monitors and manages the wolves in Yellowstone. Certain wolves wear special collars to h
23、elp biologists gather information about how the wolves live, hunt, and reproduce. Each year the wolf population is counted.Today, the debate continues over how well the gray wolf is fitting in at Yellowstone. Deer and coyote populations are down, while red foxes have made a comeback. The Yellowstone
24、 wolf project has been a valuable experiment to help biologists decide whether to reintroduce wolves to other parts of the country as well.28. What is paragraph 2 mainly about?A. Why gray wolves became a danger to farmers.B. What gray wolves preferred about living in Canada.C. How gray wolves were f
25、orced out of their original homes.D. When gray wolves were gradually reintroduced to Yellowstone.29. How is paragraph 3 developed?A. By making comparisons.B. By explaining cause and effect.C. By listing events in time order.D. By using statistics and examples.30. Why did biologists suggest the reint
26、roduction of wolves into Yellowstone?A. To reduce the parks plant diversity.B. To protect the wolves from dying out.C. To control the local livestock problem.D. To limit the deer and coyote populations.31. Which statement best summarizes the writers viewpoint?A. Wolves are an important part of Ameri
27、can national parks.B. Yellowstones wolf reintroduction program was a mistake.C. The government should be responsible for reintroducing wolves.D. Yellowstones wolf program has benefited the wolves and the park.DBabies appear to know how to help those in need, according to researchers who studied sign
28、s of altruism in almost 100 children.Researchers who wanted to see whether children would give up their food to a stranger without encouragement found the kids did just thateven when they were hungry.The scientists recruited 96 19-month-old children. During the experiments, a child and a researcher
29、sat across from each other. In the control group of the first set of experiments, researchers threw a piece of fruit onto a plate where they couldnt reach, but the child could. They then waited. In contrast, researchers in the test group pretended to drop the fruit on the plate, then tried and faile
30、d to reach it. This signaled to the child that the adult wanted the food.Among the control group, only 4 percent of the children gave the piece of fruit to the researchers, compared with 58 percent, or over half, in the test group.Next, the team explored if children would still be generous when it w
31、as at a cost to themselves. The first set of experiments was repeated with a separate group of kids before their lunchtime, when they were likely to be hungry. Similarly, 37 percent of the test group handed over their fruit, compared with none in the control group.The experiments were repeated four
32、times. Researchers got similar results each time. Babies with siblings (兄弟姐妹) and babies from Latino or Asian families shared more of the fruit, the team also found.Carter Morgan, lead professor of the study, said, “We often think of babies as selfish. But here we find that they are willing to help
33、others even when it comes at some cost to the self.”Addressing why children with siblings or from certain cultural backgrounds were more likely to share their fruit, Morgan said, “We believe this partly reflects what social psychologists call interdependence, which stresses on the importance of inte
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