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GMAT考试重点试题整理(47)

信息来源:网络  发布时间:2012-04-05

  下面进行GMAT考试重点试题整理,希望考生充分利用文中所列内容,提高备考效率。
 

  26. GWD-27-Q3-Q6 鸟为什么会飞的两种理论
 

  Two opposing scenarios,
 

  the "arboreal" hypothesis and
 

  the "cursorial" hypothesis, have
 

  Line traditionally been put forward con-
 

  (5) cerning the origins of bird flight.
 

  The "arboreal" hypothesis holds
 

  that bird ancestors began to fly
 

  by climbing frees and gliding
 

  down from branches with the
 

  (10) help of incipient feathers: the
 

  height of trees provides a good
 

  starting place for launching flight,
 

  especially through gliding. As
 

  feathers became larger over time,
 

  (15) flapping flight evolved and birds
 

  finally became fully air-borne.
 

  This hypothesis makes intuitive
 

  Sense, but certain aspects are
 

  Troubling. Archaeopteryx (the
 

  (20) earliest known bird) and its
 

  maniraptoran dinosaur cousins
 

  have no obviously arboreal
 

  adaptations, such as feet fully
 

  adapted for perching. Perhaps
 

  (25) some of them could climb trees,
 

  but no convincing analysis has
 

  demonstrated how Archaeopteryx
 

  would have both climbed and
 

  flown with its forelimbs, and there
 

  (30) were no plants taller than a few
 

  meters in the environments where
 

  Archaeopteryx fossils have been
 

  found. Even if the animals could
 

  climb trees, this ability is not
 

  (35) synonymous with gliding ability.
 

  (Many small animals, and even
 

  some goats and kangaroos,
 

  are capable of climbing trees
 

  but are not gliders.) Besides,
 

  (40) Archaeopteryx shows no obvi-
 

  ous features of gliders, such as
 

  a broad membrane connecting
 

  forelimbs and hind limbs.
 

  The “cursorial”(running)
 

  (45) hypothesis holds that small
 

  dinosaurs ran along the ground
 

  and stretched out their arms for
 

  balance as they leaped into the
 

  air after insect prey or, perhaps,
 

  (50) to avoid predators. Even rudi-
 

  mentary feathers on forelimbs
 

  could have expanded the arm's
 

  surface area to enhance lift
 

  slightly. Larger feathers could
 

  (55) have increased lift incrementally,
 

  until sustained flight was gradu-
 

  ally achieved. Of course, a leap
 

  into the air does not provide the
 

  acceleration produced by drop-
 

  (60) ping out of a tree; an animal
 

  would have to run quite fast
 

  to take off. Still, some small
 

  terrestrial animals can achieve
 

  high speeds. The cursorial
 

  (65) hypothesis is strengthened by
 

  the fact that the immediate the-
 

  ropod dinosaur ancestors of
 

  birds were terrestrial, and they
 

  had the traits needed for high
 

  (70) lift off speeds: they were small,
 

  agile, lightly built, long-legged,
 

  and good runners. And because
 

  they were bipedal, their arms
 

  were free to evolve flapping flight,
 

  (75) which cannot be said for other
 

  reptiles of their time.
 

  以上是对GMAT考试重点试题整理的介绍,希望对考生有所启发,能够加快备考进度,取得GMAT高分。

 

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