近三年高考(2024-2024)英语试题分项版解析:专题16 科普类说明文(原卷版)

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近三年高考(2024-2024)英语试题分项版解析:专题16 科普类说明文(原卷版)

  2024高考题

  1.【2024·全国新课标II】C

  Reading can be a social activity. Think of the people who belong to book groups. They choose books to read and then meet to discuss them. Now, the website BookCrossing.com turns the page on the traditional idea of a book group.

  Members go on the site and register the books they own and would like to share. BookCrossing provides an identification number to stick inside the book. Then the person leaves it in a public place, hoping that the book will have an adventure, traveling far and wide with each new reader who finds it.

  Bruce Pederson, the managing director of BookCrossing, says, “The two things that change your life are the people you meet and books you read. BookCrossing combines both.”

  Members leave books on park benches and buses, in train stations and coffee shops. Whoever finds their book will go to the site and record where they found it.

  People who find a book can also leave a journal entry describing what they thought of it. E-mails are then sent to the BookCrossing to keep them updated about where their books have been found. Bruce peterson says the idea is for people not to be selfish by keeping a book to gather dust on a shelf at home.

  BookCrossing is part of a trend among people who want to get back to the “real” and not the virtual(虚拟). The site now has more than one million members in more than one hundred thirty-five countries.

  9. Why does the author mention book groups in the first paragraph?

  A. To explain what they are.

  B.To introduce BookCrossing.

  C. To stress the importance of reading.

  D. To encourage readers to share their ideas.

  10. What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 2refer to?

  A. The book.

  B.An adventure.

  C.A public place.

  D. The identification number.

  11. What will a BookCrosser do with a book after reading it?

  A. Meet other readers to discuss it.

  B.Keep it safe in his bookcase.

  C. Pass it on to another reader.

  D. Mail it back to its owner.

  12. What is the best title for the text?

  A. Online Reading: A Virtual Tour

  B. Electronic Books: A new Trend

  C. A Book Group Brings Tradition Back

  D. A Website Links People through Books

  2.【2024·北京】C

  California Condor’s Shocking Recovery

  California condors are North America’s largest birds, with wing-length of up to 3 meters. In the 1980s, electrical lines and lead poisoning(铅中毒) nearly drove them to dying out. Now, electric shock training and medical treatment are helping to rescue these big birds.

  In the late 1980s, the last few condors were taken from the wild, and there are now more than 150 flying over California and nearby Arizona, Utah and Baja in Mexico.

  Electrical lines have been killing them off. 揂s they go in to rest for the night, they just don抰 see the power lines,?says Bruce Rideout of San Diego Zoo. Their wings can bridge the gap between lines, resulting in electrbyrocution(电死) if they touch two lines at once.

  So scientists have come up with a shocking idea. Tall poles, placed in large training areas, teach the birds to stay clear of electrical lines by giving them a painful but undeadly electric shock. Before the training was introduced, 66% of set-freed condors died of electrocution. This has now dropped to 18%.

  Lead poisonous has proved more difficult to deal with. When condors eat dead bodies of other animals containing lead, they absorb large quantities of lead. This affects their nervous systems and ability to produce baby birds, and can lead to kidney(肾) failures and death. So condors with high levels of lead are sent to Los Angeles Zoo, where they are treated with calcium EDTA, a chemical that removes lead from the blood over several days. This work is starting to pay off. The annual death rate for adult condors has dropped from 38% in 2000 to 5.4% in 2011.

  Rideout抯 team thinks that the California condors?average survival time in the wild is now just under eight years. 揂lthough these measures are not effective forever, they are vital for now,?he sadulays. 揟hey are truly good birds that are worth every effort we put into recovering them. ?63.California condors attract researchers?interest because they .

  A.are active at night

  B.had to be bred in the wild

  C.are found on in California

  D.almost died out aduin the 1980s

  64.Researchers have found electrical lines are.

  A.blocking condors?journey home

  B. big killers of Califorbnia condoras

  C. rest places for condors at night

  D. used to keep condors away

  65.According to Paraghaph 5 ,lead poisoning.

  A.makes contdors too nervous to fly

  B. has little effect on condors?kidneys

  C. can hardly be gotten rid of form condors?blood

  D. makes it different for condors to produce baby birds

  66.The passage shows that .

  A.the average survival time of condors is satisfamactory

  B.Rideout’s research interest lies in electric engineering

  C.the efforts to protect condors have brought good results

  D.researchers have found the final answers to the problem

  3.【2024·天津】C

  When John was growing up, other kids felt sorry for him. His parents always had him weeding the garden, carrying out the garbage and delivering newspapers. But when John reached adulthood, he was better off than his childhood playmates. He had more job satisfaction, a better marriage and was healthier. Most of all, he was happier. Far happier.

  These are the findings of a 40-year study that followed the lives of 456 teenage boys from Boston. The study showed that those who had worked as boys enjoyed happier and more productive lives than those who had not. “Boys who worked in the home or community gained competence (能力) and came to feel they were worthwhile members of society,” said George Vaillant, the psychologist (心理学家) who made the discovery. “And because they felt good about themselves, others felt good about them.”

  Vaillant’s study followed these males in great detail. Interviews were repeated at ages 25, 31 and 47. Under Vaillant, the researchers compared the men’s mental-health scores with their boyhood-activity scores with their boyhood-activity scores. Points were awarded for part-time jobs, housework, effort in school, and ability to deal with problems.

  The link between what the men had done as boys and how they turned out as adults was surprisingly sharp. Those who had done the most boyhood activities were twice as likely to have warm relations with a wide variety of people, five times as likely to be well paid and 16 times less likely to have been unemployed. The researchers also found that IQ and family social and economic class made no real difference in how the boys turned out. Working----at any age----is important. Childhood activities help a child develop responsibility, independence, confidence and competence---the underpinnings (基础) of emotional health. They also help him understand that people must cooperate and work toward common goals. The most competent adults are those who know how to do this. Yet work isn’t everything. As Tolstoy once said, “One can live magnificently in this world if one knows how to work and how to love, to work for the person one loves and to love one’s work.”

  46. What do we know about John?

  A. He enjoyed his career and marriage.

  B. He had few childhood playmates.

  C. He received little love from his family.

  D. He was envied by others in his childhood.

  47. Vaillant’s words in Paragraph 2 serve as _____.

  A. a description of personal values and social values

  B. an analysis of how work was related to competence

  C. an example for parents’ expectations of their children

  D. an explanation why some boys grew into happy men

  48. Vaillant’s team obtained their findings by _____.

  A. recording the boys’ effort in school

  B. evaluating the men’s mental health

  C. comparing different sets of scores

  D. measuring the men’s problem solving ability

  49. What does the underlined word “sharp” probably mean in Paragraph 4?

  A. Quick to react

  B. Having a thin edge

  C. Clear and definite

  D. sudden and rapid

  50. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?

  A. competent adults know more about love than work.

  B. Emotional health is essential to a wonderful adult life.

  C. Love brings more joy to people than work does.

  D. Independence is the key to one’s success.

  4.【2024·浙江】C

  A scientist working at her lab bench and a six-old baby playing with his food might seem to have little in common.After all,the scientist is engaged in serious research to uncover the very nature of the physical world,and the baby is,well, just playing…right?Perhaps,but some developmental psychologists have argued that this “play” is

  more like a scientific investigation than one might think.

  Take a closer look at the baby playing at the table. Each time the bowl of rice is pushed over the table edge, it

  falls in the ground---and, in the process, it belongs out important evidence about how physical objects interact ; bowls of rice do not flood in mid-sit, but require support to remain stable. It is likely that babies are not born knowing the basic fact of the universe; nor are they ever clearly taught it. Instead, babies may form an understanding of object support through repeated experiments and then build on this knowledge to learn even more about how objects interact. Though their ranges and tools differ, the baby’s investigation and the scientist’s experiment appear to share the same aim(to learn about the natural world ), overall approach (gathering direct evidence from the world), and logic (are my observations what I expected?).

  Some psychologists suggest that young children learn about more than just the physical world in this way---that they investigate human psychology and the rules of language

  using similar means. For example, it may only be through repeated experiments, evidence gathering, and finally overturning a theory, that a baby will come to accept the idea that other people can have different views and desires from what he or she has. for example, unlike the child , Mommy actually doesn’t like Dove chocolate.

  Viewing childhood development as a scientific investigation throws on how children learn ,but it also offers an inspiring look at science and scientists. Why do young children and scientists seem to be so much alike? Psychologists have suggested that science as an effort ---the desire to explore, explain, and understand our world---is simply something that comes from our babyhood. Perhaps evolution provided human babies with curiosity and a natural drive to explain their worlds, and adult scientists simply make use of the same drive that served them as children. The same cognitive systems that make young children feel good about feel good about figuring something out may have been adopted by adult scientists. As some psychologists put it, ”It is not that children are little scientists but that scientists are big children.”

  50. According to some developmental psychologists,

  A. a baby’s play is nothing more than a game.

  B. scientific research into babies; games is possible

  C. the nature of babies’ play has been thoroughly investigated

  D. a baby’s play is somehow similar to a scientist’s experiment

  51.We learn from Paragraph 2 that

  A. scientists and babies seem to observe the world differently

  B. scientists and babies often interact with each other

  C. babies are born with the knowledge of object support

  D. babies seem to collect evidence just as scientists do

  52. Children may learn the rules of language by

  A. exploring the physical world

  B. investigating human psychology

  C. repeating their own experiments

  D. observing their parents’ behaviors

  53. What is themain idea of the last paragraph?

  A. The world may be more clearly explained through children’s play.

  B. Studying babies’ play may lead to a better understanding of science.

  C. Children may have greater ability to figure out things than scientists.

  D. One’s drive for scientific research may become stronger as he grows.

  54. What is the author’s tone when he discusses the connection between scientists’ research and babies’ play?

  A. Convincing.

  B. Confused.

  C. Confidence.

  D. Cautious.

  5.【2024·江苏】 B

  Chimps(黑猩猩) will cooperate in certain ways, like gathering in war parties to protect their territory. But beyond the minimum requirements as social beings, they have little instinct (本能) to help one another. Chimps in the wild seek food for themselves. Even chimp mothers regularly decline to share food with their children. Who are able from a young age to gather their own food.

  In the laboratory, chimps don’t naturally share food either. If a chimp is put in a cage where he can pull in one plate of food for himself or, with no great effort, a plate that also provides food for a neighbor to the next cage, he will pull at random ---he just doesn’t care whether his neighbor gets fed or not. Chimps are truly selfish.

  Human children, on the other hand are extremely corporative. From the earliest ages, they decide to help others, to share information and to participate a achieving common goals. The psychologist Michael Tomasello has studied this cooperativeness in a series of expensive with very young children. He finds that if babies aged 18 months see an worried adult with hands full trying to open a door, almost all will immediately try to help.

  There are several reasons to believe that the urges to help, inform and share are not taught .but naturally possessed in young children. One is that these instincts appear at a very young age before most parents have started to train children to behave socially. Another is that the helping behaviors are not improved if the children are rewarded. A third reason is that social intelligence.Develops in children before their general cognitive(认知的)skills,at least when compared with chimps..In tests conducted by Tomtasell, the children did no better than the chimps on the physical world tests, but were considerably better at understanding the social world

  The cure of what children’s minds have and chimps’ don’t in what Tomasello calls what. Part of this ability is that they can infer what others know or are thinking. But that, even very young children want to be part of a shared purpose. They actively seek to be part of a “we”, a group that intends to work toward a shared goal.

  58. What can we learn from the experiment with chimps?

  A. Chimps seldom care about others’ interests.

  B. Chimps tend to provide food for their children.

  C. Chimps like to take in their neighbors’ food.

  D. Chimps naturally share food with each other.

  59. Michael Tomasello’s tests on young children indicate that they____.

  A. have the instinct to help others

  B. know how to offer help to adults

  C. know the world better than chimps

  D. trust adults with their hands full

  60. The passage is mainly about ____.

  A. the helping behaviors of young children

  B. ways to train children’s shared intentionality

  C. cooperation as a distinctive human nature

  D. the development of intelligence in children

  6.【2024·江苏】C

  El Nifio, a Spanish term for “the Christ child”, was named by South American fisherman who noticed that the global weather pattern, which happens every two to seven years, reduced the amount of fishes caught around Christmas. El Nifio sees warm water, collected over several years in the western Pacific, flow back eastwards when winds that normally blow westwards weaken, or sometimes the other way round.