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Scientists were embroiled (使卷入) last week in an international row over genetically modi

Scientists were embroiled (使卷入) last week in an international row over genetically modified cotton (GM cotton).

A study in China suggested for the first time that the crop was permanently damaging the environment and that insects were building up resistance to it.

The study, by the Nanjing institute of Environmental Science, combined the laboratory and field work from four Chinese scientific institutes. The study was done over a several - year period.

GM Cotton had a gene resistance to the cotton bollworm (棉铃虫) and isolated from the bacterium (细菌) named Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), but the study found that it harms the natural parasitic (寄生的) enemies of the cotton bollworm.

It also indicated that populations of pests besides the bollworm had increased in Bt cotton fields and some had replaced the bollworm as the primary pest.

However, the leading GM company, the US's Monsanto, which controls more than 80 per cent of the Bt cotton grown worldwide, dismissed the research.

It said that the industry has always cited GM cotton as its biggest success, because it can increase yields by up to 60 per cent and reduce the need for pesticides (杀虫剂) by 80 per cent.

But, unfortunately for the industry, (80) the scientists also found that the resistance of Bt cotton to bollworm decreased significantly over time.

Why scientists say no to GM cotton?

A.Because the cotton was genetically modified.

B.Because the cotton was found to damage the environment.

C.Because the cotton harms the bollworm.

D.Because Monsanto dismissed the research.

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更多“Scientists were embroiled (使卷入…”相关的问题
第1题
The scientists are interested in studying tree rings because they can tell______.A.whether

The scientists are interested in studying tree rings because they can tell______.

A.whether in that area the climate was healthy or not

B.whether a particular tree was healthy or not

C.whether people, took good care of the trees or not

D.how old the trees were

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第2题
Some years ago safety rules ______. ()A.were put forward due to scientists' recommendatio

Some years ago safety rules ______. ()

A.were put forward due to scientists' recommendations

B.came into being as a result of the workers' demand

C.were introduced because quite a number of people were killed or seriously injured

D.were effective enough to protect workers and customers

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第3题
Those scientists were conducting an experiment and expected a good______.A.effectB.resultC

Those scientists were conducting an experiment and expected a good______.

A.effect

B.result

C.consequence

D.affect

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第4题
It can be inferred from the passage that scientists of the 18th century ______.A.thought t

It can be inferred from the passage that scientists of the 18th century ______.

A.thought that they knew a great deal and could solve most problems of science

B.were afraid of facing up to the realities of scientific research

C.knew that they were ignorant and wanted to know more about nature

D.did more harm than good in promoting man's understanding of nature

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第5题
Wecan infer from the last paragraph that [A] scientific knowledge and technicaladvance may
lead to mass destruction. [B] cooperation by scientists will oftenresult in technical advances. [C] nuclear weapons have made normal,intelligent people crazy. [D] nuclear weapons were more powerfulthan. expected.

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第6题
Scientists discovered that atoms of some substances are radioactive. This means that they
are unstable and can be split. The chain of splitting atoms releases great destructive energy and it was this discovery which led scientists to develop the idea of an atomic bomb. The American government secretly worked to produce such a bomb and the first version was much more powerful than anyone had thought.

By this time, the World War II had ended in Europe. But the Japanese refused to surrender, the Americans decided that by dropping an atomic bomb on Japan, they could end the war quickly and save more of their soldier’s lives.

Soon after midnight on 6 August 1945, a bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima, a civilian target. No warning was given and there was total devastation. Almost all the buildings were destroyed and more than 100000 people died or were horribly wounded.

The Japanese military still did not want to surrender so three days later, the Americans dropped a second atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki, killing 45000 people. The Japanese government was discussing ending the war when they heard the news of Nagasaki. Finally, they surrendered and the World War II came to an end.

At first, the scientists who had built the bomb were pleased that it had helped to end the war. However, many would come to realize that they had helped to create the most terrible weapon known to man.

The first atomic bomb ______.

A.was less powerful

B.was dropped in Nagasaki

C.was a failure

D.was tested in desert

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第7题
It is implied in the passage that ______. ()A.governments and companies had different opi

It is implied in the passage that ______. ()

A.governments and companies had different opinions about the safety of products

B.governments paid little attention to the safety of products

C.government officials often did not listen to scientists

D.in the past no safety laws were introduced by governments

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第8题
According to scientists, if the energy in the atmosphere were put under our control, what
would happen?

A.We have an inexhaustible supply of energy from it.

B.This could bring the world to an energy crisis.

C.The sources of energy on earth would become unreliable.

D.We find ourselves in difficult position with environmental pollution.

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第9题
Lead deposits, which accumulated in soil and snow during the 1960's and 70's, we
re primarily the result of leaded gasoline emissions originating in the United States. In the twenty years that the Clean Air Act has mandated unleaded gas use in the United States, the lead accumulation world-wide has decreased significantly.

A study published recently in the journal Nature shows that air- borne leaded gas emissions from the United States were the leading contributor to the high concentration of lead in the snow in Greenland. The new study is a result of the continued research led by Dr. Charles Boutron, an expert on the impact of heavy metals on the environment at the National Center for Scientific Research in France. A study by Dr. Boutron published in 1991 showed that lead levels in arctic snow were declining.

In his new study, Dr. Boutron found the ratios of the different forms of lead in the leaded gasoline used in the United States were different from the ratios of European, Asian and Canadian gasoline and thus enabled scientists to differentiate the lead sources. The dominant lead ratio found in Greenland snow matched that found in gasoline from the United States.

In a study published in the. journal Ambio, scientists found that lead levels in soil in the North-eastern United States had decreased markedly since the introduction of unleaded gasoline.

Many scientists had believed that the lead would stay in soil and snow for a longer period.

The authors of the Ambio study examined samples of the upper layers of soil taken from the same sites of 30 forest floors in New England, New York and Pennsylvania in 1980 and in 1990.

The forest environment processed and redistributed the lead faster than the scientists had expected.

Scientists say both studies demonstrate that certain parts of the ecosystem respond rapidly to reductions in atmospheric pollution, but that these findings should not be used as a license to pollute.

1. Lead accumulation worldwide decreased significantly after the use of unleaded gas in the US .

A、 was discouraged

B、was enforced by law

C、was prohibited by law

D、 was introduced

2. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that scientists .

A、are puzzled by the mystery of forest pollution

B、feel relieved by the use of unleaded gasoline

C、still consider lead pollution a problem

D、lack sufficient means to combat lead pollution

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第10题
If there is one thing scientists have to hear, it is that the game is over. Raised on the
belief of an endless voyage of discovery, they recoil from the suggestion that most of the best things have already been located. If they have, today's scientists can hope to contribute no more than a few grace notes to the symphony of science.

A book to be published in Britain this week, The End of Science, argues persuasively that this is the case. Its author, John Horgan, is a senior writer for Scientific American magazine, who has interviewed many of today's leading scientists and science philosophers. The shock of realizing that science might be over came to him, he says, when he was talking to Oxford mathematician and physicist Sir Roger Penrose.

The End of Science provoked a wave of denunciation in the United States last year. "The reaction has been one of complete shock and disbelief, "Mr. Horgan says.

The real question is whether any remaining unsolved problems, of which there are plenty, lend themselves to universal solutions. If they do not, then the focus of scientific discovery is already narrowing. Since the triumphs of the 1960s—the genetic code, plate tectonics, and the microwave background radiation that went a long way towards proving the Big Bang—genuine scientific revolutions have been scarce. More scientists are now alive, spending more money on research, that ever. Yet most of the great discoveries of the 19th and 20th centuries were made before the appearance of state sponsorship, when the scientific enterprise was a fraction of its present size.

Were the scientists who made these discoveries brighter than today's? That seems unlikely. A far more reasonable explanation is that fundamental science has already entered a period of diminished returns. "Look, don't get me wrong," says Mr Horgan. "There are lots of important things still to study, and applied science and engineering can go on for ever. I hope we get a cure for cancer, and for mental disease, though there are few real signs of progress."

The sentence "most of the best things have already been located" could mean______.

A.most of the best things have already been changed

B.most of the best things remain to be changed

C.there have never been so many best things waiting to be discovered

D.most secrets of the world have already been discovered

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