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托福考试指导:名师阅读讲义(4)
作者:城市网 来源:城市网学院 更新日期:2013-9-9

  Pennsylvania's colonial ironmasters forged iron and a revolution that had both
  industrial and political implications. The colonists in North America wanted the right to
  the profits gained from their manufacturing. However, England wanted all of the
  Line colonies' rich ores and raw materials to feed its own factories, and also wanted the
  (5)  colonies to be a market for its finished goods. England passed legislation in 1750 to
  prohibit colonists from making finished iron products, but by 1771, when entrepreneur
  Mark Bird established the Hopewell blast furnace in Pennsylvania, iron making had
  be#e the backbone of American industry. It also had be#e one of the major issues
  that fomented the revolutionary break between England and the British colonies. By the
  (10) time the War of Independence broke out in 1776, Bird, angered and determined, was
  manufacturing cannons and shot at Hopewell to be used by the Continental Army.
  After the war, Hopewell, along with hundreds of other "iron plantations," continued to
  form the new nation's industrial foundation well into the nineteenth century. The rural
  landscape became dotted with tall stone pyramids that breathed flames and smoke,
  (15) charcola-fueled iron furnaces that produced the versatile metal so crucial to the nation's
  growth. Generations of ironmasters, craftspeople, and workers produced goods during
  war and peace-—ranging from cannons and shot to domestic items such as cast-iron
  stoves, pots, and sash weights for windows.
  The region around Hopewell had everything needed for iron production: a wealth of
  (20) iron ore near the surface, limestone for removing impurities from the iron, hardwood
  forests to supply the charcoal used for fuel, rushing water to power the bellows that
  pumped blasts of air into the furnace fires, and workers to supply the labor. By the
  1830's, Hopewell had developed a reputation for producing high quality cast-iron stoves,
  for which there was a steady market. As Pennsylvania added more links to its
  (25) transportation system of roads, canals, and railroads, it became easier to ship parts made
  by Hopewell workers to sites all over the east coast. There they ware assembled into
  stoves and sold from Rhode Island to Maryland as the "Hopewell stove". By the time the
  last fires burned out at Hopewell ironworks in 1883, the #munity had produced some
  80,000 cast-iron stoves.
  5. Pennsylvania was an ideal location for the Hopewell ironworks for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
  (A) Many workers were available in the area
  (B) The center of operations of the army was nearby
  (C) The metal ore was easy to acquire
  (D) There was an abundance of wood
  答案:B
  Under the Earth's topsoil, at various levels, sometimes under a layer of rock, there are
  deposits of clay. Look at cuts where highways have been built to see exposed clay beds;
  or look at a construction site, where pockets of clay may be exposed. Rivers also reveal
  Line clay along their banks, and erosion on a hillside may make clay easily accessible.
  (5)  What is clay made of? The Earth's surface is basically rock, and it is this rock that
  gradually de#poses into clay. Rain, streams, alternating freezing and thawing, roots of
  trees and plants forcing their way into cracks, earthquakes, volcanic action, and glaciers
  —all of these forces slowly break down the Earth's exposed rocky crust into smaller and
  smaller pieces that eventually be#e clay.
  (10)   Rocks are #posed of elements and #pounds of elements. Feldspar, which is the
  most abundant mineral on the Earth's surface, is basically made up of the oxides
  silica and alumina #bined with alkalis like potassium and some so-called impurities
  such as iron. Feldspar is an essential #ponent of granite rocks, and as such it is the
  basis of clay. When it is wet, clay can be easily shaped to make a variety of useful
  (15) objects, which can then be fired to varying degrees of hardness and covered with
  impermeable decorative coatings of glasslike material called glaze. Just as volcanic
  action, with its intense heat, fuses the elements in certain rocks into a glasslike rock
  called obsidian, so can we apply heat to earthen materials and change them into a hard,
  dense material. Different clays need different heat levels to fuse, and some, the low-fire
  (20) clays, never be#e nonporous and watertight like highly fired stoneware. Each clay can
  stand only a certain amount of heat without losing its shape through sagging or melting.
  Variations of clay #position and the temperatures at which they are fired account for
  the differences in texture and appearance between a china teacup and an earthenware
  flowerpot.
  2. It can be inferred from the passage that clay is LEAST likely to be plentiful in which of the following areas?
  (A) in desert sand dunes
  (B) in forests
  (C) on hillsides
  (D) near rivers
  答案:A


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