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2009年广东省高考预测模拟试题(英语)

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更新时间2009-3-31

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B

     The earth’s most rich resource — water has become one of the most precious resources in the United States as rivers, lakes, and freshwater reservoirs are increasingly exploited for human use. Consequently, using precise farming techniques to refine “irrigation scheduling” is a research area of particular interest to Susan Moran, a researcher with the US department of Agriculture. She explains that in the southwest, irrigation is both difficult and expensive. There, she says, farmers have a tendency to over irrigate, spending both more time and money than is necessary.

     “I’m trying to provide new information that could be used by farmers to schedule irrigations to improve their profitability and use less water,” Moran says. “Farmers often look at weather changes and then schedule irrigation based on that information. But if they had better information, they could use scientific models to compute more precisely how much water their crop is using.”

     Rather than guessing their crop’s potential need for water based upon weather changes, farmers can use remote sensors to measure how much water their crop is actually using. This would give them a more accurate measure of how much more water it needs.

     Moran believes that if farmers are getting good and timely measurements of plant and air temperature, then they can program when and how much water to give each crop through an irrigation system. No more water would be used than needed, thus saving cost and conserving water.

     Moran introduces one study she conducted in Arizona to investigate the use of remote sensing data for scheduling cotton irrigations. Typically, those farmers irrigate ten times per growing season, but evidence showed that some of those farmers could achieve basically the same harvest with only nine irrigations.

     “In those cases, one less irrigation saved more than all the cost of remote sensing data,” she states. “Both irrigation and satellite remote sensing data are expensive. But then again many farmers are used to wording together as a group. They are used to sharing. I’m hoping they could do the same with remote sensing data — purchase one scene over a large area to cover many farms, which would further reduce the cost.”

46. What does Moran think is the problem with farmers?

  A. Over-used reservoirs.                           B. Precision farming.

  C. Irrigation researches.                            D. Over-irrigation.

47. How can farmers get the new information about their crop?

  A. To reschedule irrigation as required.

  B. To watch weather changes regularly.

  C. To use remote sensors as researchers suggest.

  D. To use scientific models since computing is more reliable.

48. What do farmers check upon when they decide how much water each crop needs?

  A. Profitability.         B. Remote sensors.   C. The cost.           D. Air temperature.

49. What’s the purpose of Moran introducing the study she carried out in Arizona?

  A. To investigate the use of remote sensing data.

  B. To support her viewpoint in the previous paragraph.

  C. To show how farmers can reap a harvest.

  D. To criticize those farmers who used too much water.

50. What is among the best possible ways to help save farmers’ money?

  A. Changing irrigation.                              B. Sharing sensing data.

  C. Buying one computer.                           D. Extending the farms.

 

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