2016年12月英语六级真题(第3套)
Part IWriting(30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on
creation. Your essay should include the importance of creation and measures
to be taken to encourage creation. You are required to write at least 150words
but no more than 200words.
Part II
Listening Comprehension
(30 minutes)
(说明:由于2016年12月六级考试全国只出了2套听力,本套真题听力与前2套内容完全一样,只是
顺序不一样,因此在本套真题中不再重复出现)
Part III
Reading Comprehension
(40 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select
one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the
passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each
choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter
for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You
may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.
Small communities, with their distinctive character—where life is stable and intensely
human—are disappearing. Some have
slowly, but all have
27
26
from the face of the earth, others are dying
changes as they have come into contact with an
28
machine civilization. The merging of diverse peoples into a common mass has produced
tension among members of the minorities and the majority alike.
The Old Order Amish, who arrived on American shores in colonial times, have
29
in the modern world in distinctive, small communities. They have resisted the
homogenization
30
more successfully than others. In planting and harvest time one
can see their bearded men working the fields with horses and their women hanging out
the laundry in neat rows to dry. Many American people have seen Amish families, with the
men wearing broad-brimmed black hats and the women in long dresses, in railway or bus
31 . Although the Amish have lived with
32
America for over two and a half centuries,
they have moderated its influence on their personal lives, their families, communities, and
their values.
The Amish are often
33
by other Americans to be relics of the past who live a
simple, inflexible life dedicated to inconvenient out-dated customs. They are seen as
abandoning both modern
34
and the American dream of success and progress. But
most people have no quarrel with the Amish for doing things the old-fashioned way. Their
conscientious objection was tolerated in wartime, for after all, they are good farmers
who
35 the virtues of work and thrift.
A)accessing
I)progress
B)conveniences
J)respective
C)destined
K)survived
D)expanding
L)terminals
E)industrialized
M)undergone
F)perceived
N)universal
G)practice
O)vanished
H)process
Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached
to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs.
Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a
paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the
questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.
Countries Rush for Upper Hand in Antarctica
[A] On a glacier-filled island with fjords ( 峡 湾 ) and elephant seals, Russia has built
Antarctica’s first Orthodox church on a hill overlooking its research base. Less than an
hour away by snowmobile, Chinese labourers have updated the Great Wall Station, a vital
part of China’s plan to operate five bases on Antarctica, complete with an indoor
badminton court and sleeping quarters for 150 people. Not to be outdone, India’s futuristic
new Bharathi base, built on stilts ( 桩 子 ) using 134 interlocking shipping containers,
resembles a spaceship. Turkey and Iran have announced plans to build bases, too.
[B] More than a century has passed since explorers raced to plant their flags at the
bottom of the world, and for decades to come this continent is supposed to be protected
as a scientific preserve, shielded from intrusions like military activities and mining. But an
array of countries are rushing to assert greater influence here, with an eye not just
towards the day those protective treaties expire, but also for the strategic and commercial
opportunities that already exist.
[C] The newer players are stepping into what they view as a treasure house of resources.
Some of the ventures focus on the Antarctic resources that are already up for grabs, like
abundant sea life. South Korea, which operates state-of-the-art bases here, is increasing
its fishing of krill(磷虾), found in abundance in the Southern Ocean, while Russia recently
frustrated efforts to create one of the world’s largest ocean sanctuaries here.
[D] Some scientists are examining the potential for harvesting icebergs from Antarctica,
which is estimated to have the biggest reserves of fresh water on the planet. Nations are
also pressing ahead with space research and satellite projects to expand their global
navigation abilities.
[E] Building on a Soviet-era foothold, Russia is expanding its monitoring stations for
Glonass, its version of the Global Positioning System ( GPS ) . At least three Russian
stations are already operating in Antarctica, part of its effort to challenge the dominance
of the American GPS, and new stations are planned for sites like the Russian base, in the
shadow of the Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity.
[F] Elsewhere in Antarctica, Russian researchers boast of their recent discovery of a
freshwater reserve the size of Lake Ontario after drilling through miles of solid ice. “You
can see that we’re here to stay,” said Vladimir Cheberdak, 57, chief of the Bellingshausen
Station, as he sipped tea under a portrait of Fabian Gottlieb yon Bellingshausen, a highranking officer in the Imperial Russian Navy who explored the Antarctic coast in 1820.
[G] Antarctica’s mineral, oil and gas wealth are a longer-team prize. The treaty banning
mining here, shielding coveted(令人垂涎的)reserves of iron ore, coal and chromium, comes
up for review in 2048. Researchers recently found kimberlite(金伯利岩)deposits hinting at
the existence of diamonds. And while assessments vary widely, geologists estimate that
Antarctica holds at least 36 billion barrels of oil and natural gas.
[H] Beyond the Antarctic treaties, huge obstacles persist to tapping these resources, like
drifting icebergs that could jeopardise offshore platforms. Then there is Antarctica’s
remoteness, with some mineral deposits found in windswept locations on a continent that
is larger than Europe and where winter temperatures hover around minus 55 degrees
Celsius.
[I] But advances in technology might make Antarctica a lot more accessible three
decades from now. And even before then, scholars warn, the demand for resources in an
energy-hungry world could raise pressure to renegotiate Antarctica’s treaties, possibly
allowing more commercial endeavours here well before the prohibitions against them
expire. The research stations on King George Island offer a glimpse into the long game on
this ice-blanketed continent as nations assert themselves, eroding the sway long held by
countries like the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.
[J] Being stationed in Antarctica involves adapting to life on the planet’s driest, windiest
and coldest continent, yet each nation manages to make itself at home. Bearded Russian
priests offer regular services at the Orthodox church for the 16 or so Russian speakers who
spend the winter at the base, largely polar scientists in fields like glaciology and
meteorology. Their number climbs to about 40 in the warmer summer months. China has
arguably the fastest-growing operations in Antarctica. It opened its fourth station last year
and is pressing ahead with plans to build a fifth. It is building its second ice-breaking ship
and setting up research drilling operations on an ice dome 13,422 feet above sea level
that is one of the planet’s coldest places. Chinese officials say the expansion in Antarctica
prioritises scientific research, but they also acknowledge that concerns about “resource
security” influence their moves.
[K] China’s newly renovated Great Wall Station on King George Island makes the Russian
and Chilean bases here seem outdated. “We do weather monitoring here and other
research,” Ning Xu, 53, the chief of the Chinese base, said over tea during a fierce
blizzard ( 暴 风 雪 ) in late November. The large base he leads resembles a snowed-in
college campus on holiday break, with the capacity to sleep more than 10 times the 13
people who were staying on through the Antarctic winter. Yong Yu, a Chinese
microbiologist, showed off the spacious building, with empty desks under an illustrated
timeline detailing the rapid growth of China’s Antarctic operations since the 1980s. “We
now feel equipped to grow,” he said.
[L] As some countries expand operations in Antarctica, the United States maintains three
year-round stations on the continent with more than 1,000 people during the southern
hemisphere’s summer, including those at the Amundsen-Scott station, built in 1956 at an
elevation of 9,301 feet on a plateau at the South Pole. But US researchers quietly complain
about budget restraints and having far fewer icebreakers than Russia, limiting the reach of
the United States in Antarctica.
[M] Scholars warn that Antarctica’s political drift could blur the distinction between
military and civilian activities long before the continent’s treaties come up for
renegotiation, especially in parts of Antarctica that are ideal for intercepting(拦截)signals
from satellites or retasking satellite systems, potentially enhancing global electronic
intelligence operations.
[N] Some countries have had a hard time here. Brazil opened a research station in 1984,
but it was largely destroyed by a fire that killed two members of the navy in 2012, the
same year that a diesel-laden Brazilian barge sank near the base. As if that were not
enough, a Brazilian C-130 Hercules military transport plane has remained stranded near
the runway of Chile’s air base here since it crash-landed in 2014.
[O] However, Brazil’s stretch of misfortune has created opportunities for China, with a
Chinese company winning the $100 million contract in 2015 to rebuild the Brazilian
station.
[P] Amid all the changes, Antarctica maintains its allure. South Korea opened its second
Antarctic research base in 2014, describing it as a way to test robots developed by Korean
researchers for use in extreme conditions. With Russia’s help, Belarus is preparing to build
its first Antarctic base. Colombia said this year that it planned to join other South American
nations with bases in Antarctica.
[Q] “The old days of the Antarctic being dominated by the interests and wishes of white
men from European, Australasian and North American states are over,” said Klaus Dodds,
a politics scholar at the University of London who specialises in Antarctica. “The reality is
that Antarctica is geopolitically contested.”
36. According to Chinese officials, their activities in Antarctica lay greater emphasis on
scientific research.
37. Efforts to create one of the world’s largest ocean sanctuaries failed because of Russia’s
obstruction.
38. With several monitoring stations operating in Antarctica, Russia is trying hard to
counter America’s dominance in the field of worldwide navigational facilities.
39. According to geologists’ estimates, Antarctica has enormous reserves of oil and natural
gas.
40. It is estimated that Antarctica boasts of the richest reserves of fresh water on earth.
41. The demand for energy resources may compel renegotiation of Antarctica’s treaties
before their expiration.
42. Many countries are racing against each other to increase their business and strategic
influence on Antarctica.
43. Antarctica’s harsh natural conditions constitute huge obstacles to the exploitation of
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