题目信息
People associate global warming with temperature, but the phrase is misleading-it fails to mention the relevance of water. Nearly every significant indicator of hydrological activity-rainfall, snowmelt, glacial melt-is changing at an accelerating pace (one can arbitrarily pick any point of the hydrological cycle and notice a disruption). One analysis pegged the increase in precipitation at 2 percent over the century. In water terms this sounds auspicious, promising increased supply, but the changing timing and composition of the precipitation more than neutralizes the advantage. For one thing, it is likely that more of the precipitation will fall in intense episodes, with flooding a reasonable prospect. In addition, while rainfall will increase, snowfall will decrease. Such an outcome means that in watersheds that depend on snowmelt, like the Indus, Ganges, Colorado river basins, less water will be stored as snow, and more of it will flow in the winter, when it plays no agricultural role; conversely, less of it will flow in the summer, when it is most needed. One computer model showed that on the Animas River an increase in temperature of 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit would cause runoff to rise by 85 percent from January to March, but drop by 40 percent from July to September. The rise in temperature increases the probability and intensity of spring floods and threatens dam safety, which is predicated on lower runoff projections. Dams in arid areas also may face increased sedimentation, since a 10 percent annual increase in precipitation can double the volume of sediment washed into rivers.

The consequences multiply. Soil moisture will intensify at the highest northern latitudes, where precipitation will grow far more than evaporation and plant transpiration but where agriculture is nonexistent. At the same time, precipitation will drop over northern mid-latitude continents in summer months, when ample soil moisture is an agricultural necessity. Meanwhile the sea level will continue to rise as temperatures warm, accelerating saline contamination of freshwater aquifers and river deltas. The temperature will cause increased evaporation, which in turn will lead to a greater incidence of drought.

Perhaps most disturbing of all, the hydrologic cycle is becoming increasingly unpredictable. This means that the last century's hydrological cycle-the set of assumptions about water on which modern irrigation is based-has become unreliable. Build a dam too large, and it may not generate its designed power; build it too small, and it may collapse or flood. Release too little dam runoff in the spring and risk flood, as the snowmelt cascades downstream with unexpected volume; release too much and the water will not be available for farmers when they need it. At a time when water scarcity calls out for intensified planning, planning itself may be stymied.
The passage is primarily concerned with
A:arguing how the world`s hydrological cycle is irrevocably changing
B:highlighting the inadequacy of relying on last century`s hydrological cycle
C:discussing the consequences of decreased water supply in dams
D:warning against the unrestrained exploitation of natural resources
E:describing how the Earth`s water will be affected by global warming
参考答案及共享解析
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正确答案: E:describing how the Earth`s water will be affected by global warming

文章类型:学术研究

文章套路:观点对比

文章介绍了 Frazier 和 Mosteller 认为医学研究的临床试验需要进行方式转变。后面的文章则解释了他们认为该如何转变,并且他们认为应该转变的理由




题目类型: Main Idea

选项解析:

A、文章提到医学研究的实践是为了展示 Frazier 和 Mosteller 认为应该转变临床方式的理由

B、不仅仅讨论了会提高成本的医学实验,还讨论了如何改进。

C、并不只是在评估现在医学实验实践的缺点


D、正确答案

E、 并不是说当代研究者的研究方式可能发生改变,而是 Frazier 和 Mosteller 提出了改进的方法


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