- A.They would probably reach the outer edge of the solar system.
- B.They traveled faster than Pluto.
- C.They were beyond both Uranus’ and Neptune’s orbits by the end of the 1980s.
- D.They traveled around Saturn several times.
- A.12
- B.5
- C.4
- D.11
- A.the moon
- B.Mars
- C.Saturn
- D.Venus
- A.The planets move around the Sun.
- B.The Earth is a planet.
- C.People began to know the true nature of the planets.
- D.The remotest fixed stars have planets of their own.
- A.know how to prevent it from happening
- B.take global warming more seriously
- C.take advantage of it
- D.care for key species more and save them from dying out
- A.There is a close relationship between EI Nino and global warming.
- B.EI Nino will become more severe if the global warming is more serious.
- C.It can’t be said for certain right now that EI Nino is closely related to global warming.
- D.A slight increase in global temperature could completely change the world’s weather patterns.
- 5
-
(A)
- An EI Nino year begins when the trade winds lessen. Without these winds to blow warm surface water to the western Pacific, sea currents pull the warm water east, along with the storms and rain. The result is drought in countries of the western Pacific and
- But the climatic disruption caused by EI Nino stretches far beyond the shores of the Pacific Ocean. Ocean currents that pull the warm water toward South America create winds that blow across Central America and the Caribbean, into the Atlantic. Plent
- If it turns that EI Nino is affected by global warming, this news portends badly for the future. It would mean that even a very small increase in the average global temperature could totally alter the world’s weather patterns. This would upset many ecosys
- A.Damages from EI Nino to the Americas.
- B.The need for early EI Nino forecasting.
- C.Damages from and issues about EI Nino.
- D.The relationship between EI Nino and global warming.