You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which
are based on Reading Passage 2 on the following pages.
Questions 14-17
Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-F.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs B and D-F from the fist
of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-ix, in boxes 14-17 on your answer
sheet.
List of
Headings
i
Predicting climatic changes
ii The
relevance of the Little Ice Age today
iii How cities contribute
to climate change
iv Human impact on the
climate
v How
past climatic conditions can be determined
vi A growing need for
weather records
vii A study covering a
thousand years
viii
People have always responded to climate
change
ix Enough food at
last
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Example
Answer
Paragraph A
viii
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14 Paragraph B
Example
Answer
Paragraph C
v
|
15 Paragraph D
16 Paragraph E
17 Paragraph F
THE LITTLE ICE
AGE
A This book will provide a detailed
examination of the Little Ice Age and other climatic shifts, but,
before I embark on that, let me provide a historical context. We
tend to think of climate - as opposed to weather - as something
unchanging, yet humanity has been at the mercy of climate change
for its entire existence, with at least eight glacial episodes in
the past 730, 000 years. Our ancestors adapted to the universal but
irregular global warming since the end of the last great Ice Age,
around 10, 000years ago, with dazzling opportunism. They developed
strategies for surviving harsh drought cycles, decades of heavy
rainfall or unaccustomed cold; adopted agriculture and
stock-raising, which revolutionised human life; and founded the
world's first pre-industrial civilisations in Egypt, Mesopotamia
and the Americas. But the price of sudden climate change, in
famine, disease and suffering, was often high.
B The Little Ice Age lasted from roughly 1300
until the middle of the nineteenth century. Only two centuries ago,
Europe experienced a cycle of bitterly cold winters; mountain
glaciers in the Swiss Alps were the lowest in recorded memory, and
pack ice surrounded Iceland for much of the year. The climatic
events of the Little Ice Age did more than help shape the modern
world. They are the deeply important context for the current
unprecedented global warming. The Little Ice Age was far from a
deep freeze, however; rather an irregular seesaw of rapid climatic
shifts, few lasting more than a quarter-century, driven by complex
and still little understood interactions between the atmosphere and
the ocean. The seesaw brought cycles of intensely cold winters and
easterly winds, then switched abruptly to years of heavy spring and
early summer rains, mild winters, and frequent Atlantic storms, or
to periods of droughts, light northeasterly winds, and summer heat
waves.
C Reconstructing the climate changes of the
past is extremely difficult, because systematic weather
observations began only a few centuries ago, in Europe and North
America. Records from India and tropical Africa are even more
recent. For the time before records began, we have only 'proxy
records' reconstructed largely from tree rings and ice cores,
supplemented by a few incomplete written accounts. We now have
hundreds of tree-ring records from throughout the northern
hemisphere, and many from south of the equator, too, amplified with
a growing body of temperature data from ice cores drilled in
Antarctica, Greenland, the Peruvian Andes, and other locations. We
are close to a knowledge of annual summer and winter temperature
variations over much of the northern hemisphere going back 600
years.
D This book is a narrative history of climatic
shifts during the past ten centuries, and some of the ways in which
people in Europe adapted to them. Part One describes the Medieval
Warm Period, roughly 900 to 1200. During these three centuries,
Norse voyagers from Northern Europe explored northern seas, settled
Greenland, and visited North America. It was not a time of uniform
warmth, for then, as always since the Great Ice Age, there were
constant shifts in rainfall and temperature. Mean European
temperatures were about the same as today, perhaps slightly
cooler.
E It is known that the Little Ice Age cooling
began in Greenland and the Arctic in about 1200. As the Arctic ice
pack spread southward, Norse voyages to the west were rerouted into
the open Atlantic, then ended altogether. Storminess increased in
the North Atlantic and North Sea. Colder, much wetter weather
descended on Europe between 1315 and 1319, when thousands perished
in a continent-wide famine. By 1400, the weather had become
decidedly more unpredictable and stormier, with sudden shifts and
lower temperatures that culminated in the cold decades of the late
sixteenth century. Fish were a vital commodity in growing towns and
cities, where food supplies were a constant concern. Dried cod and
herring were already the staples of the European fish trade, but
changes in water temperatures forced fishing fleets to work further
offshore. The Basques, Dutch, and English developed the first
offshore fishing boats adapted to a colder and stormier Atlantic. A
gradual agricultural revolution in northern Europe stemmed from
concerns over food supplies at a time of rising populations. The
revolution involved intensive commercial farming and the growing of
animal fodder on land not previously used for crops. The increased
productivity from farmland made some countries self-sufficient in
grain and livestock and offered effective protection against
famine.
F Global temperatures began to rise slowly
after 1850, with the beginning of the Modern Warm Period. There was
a vast migration from Europe by land-hungry farmers and others, to
which the famine caused by the Irish potato blight contributed, to
North America, Australia, New Zealand, and southern Africa.
Millions of hectares of forest and woodland fell before the
newcomers' axes between 1850 and 1890, as intensive European
farming methods expanded across the world. The unprecedented land
clearance released vast quantities of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, triggering for the first time humanly caused global
warming. Temperatures climbed more rapidly in the twentieth century
as the use of fossil fuels proliferated and greenhouse gas levels
continued to soar. The rise has been even steeper since the early
1980s. The Little Ice Age has given way to a new climatic regime,
marked by prolonged and steady warming. At the same time, extreme
weather events like Category 5 hurricanes are becoming more
frequent.
Questions 18-22
Complete the summary using the list of words, A-I, below.
Write the correct letter, A-I, in boxes 18-22 on your answer
sheet.
Weather during the Little Ice
Age
Documentation of past weather conditions is limited: our main
sources of knowledge of conditions in the distant past are 18
…………………… and 19 …………………… . We can deduce that the Little Ice Age
was a time of 20 ……………………, rather than of consistent freezing.
Within it there were some periods of very cold winters, others of
21 …………………… and heavy rain, and yet others that saw 22 ……………………
with no rain at all.
A climatic
shies
B ice
cores
C tree
rings
D glaciers
E
interactions
F weather
observations
G heat
waves
H
storms
I written
accounts
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Questions 23-26
Classify the following events as occurring during the
A Medieval Warm Period
B Little Ice Age
C Modern Warm Period
Write the correct letter, A, B or C, in boxes 23-26 on your
answer sheet.
23 Many Europeans started farming abroad.
24 The cutting down of trees began to affect
the climate.
25 Europeans discovered other lands.
26 Changes took place in fishing patterns.