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Earth Science[img]2014m9s/ct_etoefm_etoeflistz_0305_20149[/img] [br] Listen to
Earth Science[img]2014m9s/ct_etoefm_etoeflistz_0305_20149[/img] [br] Listen to
游客
2025-02-06
25
管理
问题
Earth Science
[br] Listen to Track 52.
Earth Science
Narrator
Listen to part of a lecture in an earth science class.
Professor
We’re really just now beginning to understand how quickly drastic climate change can take place. We can see past occurrences of climate change that took place over just a few hundred years. Take, uh, the Sahara desert... in Northern Africa.
The Sahara was really different 6,000 years ago. I mean, you wouldn’t call it a tropical paradise or anything—ah, or maybe you would if you think about how today in some parts of the Sahara it only rains about once a century. Um, but basically, you had greenery and you had water. And what /find particularly interesting, amazing, really what really indicates how un-desert-like the Sahara was thousands of years ago, was something painted on a rock: prehistoric art—hippopotamuses. As you know, hippos need a lot of water, and hence . .. Hence what?
Female student
They need to live near a large source of water year-round.
Professor
That’s right.
Male student
But how’s that proof that the Sahara used to be a lot wetter? I mean, the people who painted those hippos ... well, couldn’t they have seen them on their travels?
Professor
OK, in principle they could, Carl. But the rock paintings aren’t the only evidence. Beneath the Sahara are huge aquifers, basically a sea of fresh water that’s perhaps a million years old, filtered through rock layers. And, ah, and-and then there’s fossilized pollen from low shrubs and grasses that once grew in the Sahara. In fact these plants still grow, ah, but hundreds of miles away in more vegetated areas. Anyway, it’s this fossilized pollen, along with the aquifers, and the rock paintings—these three things are all evidence that the Sahara was once much greener than it is today, that there were hippos and probably elephants, and giraffes, and so on.
Male student
So, what happened?
Professor
How did it happen? Well now we’re so used to hearing about how human activities are affecting the climate, right; but that takes the focus away from the natural variations in the Earth’s climate. Like the Ice Age, right? The planet was practically covered in ice just a few thousand years ago. Now, as far as the Sahara goes, there’s some recent literature that points to the migration of the monsoon in that area.
Male/Female student
Huh?
Professor
What do I mean? OK. A monsoon is a seasonal wind that can bring in a large amount of rainfall. Now, if the monsoon migrates, well that means the rains move to another area, right?
So what caused the monsoon to migrate? Well, the answer is the dynamics of Earth’s motions—the same thing that caused the Ice Age, by the way. The Earth’s not always the same distance from the Sun. And it’s nor always tilting toward the Sun at the same angle. There’re slight variations in these two parameters. They’re gradual variations, but their effects can be pretty abrupt, and can cause the climate to change in just a few hundred years.
Female student
That’s abrupt?
Professor
Well, yeah, considering that other climate shifts take thousands of years, this one’s pretty abrupt. So these changes in the planet’s motions, they caused the climate to change; but it was also compounded. What the Sahara experienced was a sort of runaway drying effect.
As I said, the monsoon migrated south—so there was less rain in the Sahara. The land started to get drier— which in turn caused a huge decrease in the amount of vegetation, because vegetation doesn’t grow as well in dry soil, right? And then, less vegetation means the soil can’t hold water as well—the soil loses its ability to retain water when it does rain. So then you have less moisture to help clouds form ... nothing to evaporate for cloud formation. And then the cycle continues—less rain, drier soil, less vegetation, fewer clouds, less rain, etcetera, etcetera.
Male student
But what about the people who made the rock paintings?
Professor
Good question. No one really knows. But there might be some connection to ancient Egypt. At about the same time that the Sahara was becoming a desert, mmm . . . 5,000 years ago, Egypt really began to flourish out in the Nile River Valley. And that’s not that far away. So it’s only logical to hypothesize that a lot of these people migrated to the Nile Valley when they realized that this was more than a temporary drought. And some people take this a step further—and that’s OK, that’s science—and they hypothesize that this migration actually provided an important impetus in the development of ancient Egypt. Well, we’ll stay tuned on that.
Narrator
Listen again to part of the lecture. Then answer the question.
Professor
I mean, you wouldn’t call it a tropical paradise or anything—ah, or maybe you would if you think about how today in some parts of the Sahara it only rains about once a century.
Narrator
Why does the professor say this:
Professor
Or maybe you would if you think about how today in some parts of the Sahara it only rains about once a century.
选项
A、To correct a misstatement he made about the Sahara’s climate
B、To suggest that the current dryness of the Sahara is exaggerated
C、To indicate that scientists are not in agreement about the Sahara’s past climate
D、To emphasize the difference between the current and past climates of the Sahara
答案
D
解析
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