剑桥雅思18阅读真题电子版Test4 Passage3

剑桥雅思18共收集了雅思真题4套,羊驼雅思整理了第四套阅读真题答案及解析Test 4 Reading,以下是阅读第三篇文章Passage3的文章原文,供烤鸭们复习参考。

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READING PASSAGE  3

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40.which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.

Alfred Wegener:science,exploration and the theory of continental drift

by Mott T Greene

Introduction

This is a book about the life and scientific work of Alfred Wegener,whose reputation   today rests with his theory of continental displacements,better known as continental drift'.Wegener proposed this theory in 1912 and developed it extensively for nearly 20 years.His book on the subject,The Originof Continents and Oceans,went through four editions and was the focus of an international controversy in his lifetime and for some years after his death.

Wegener's basic idea was that many mysteries about the Earth's history could be solved if one supposed that the continents moved laterally,rather than supposing that they remained fixed in place.Wegener showed in great detail how such continental movements were plausible and how they worked,using evidence from a large number of  sciences  including  geology,geophysics,paleontology,and  climatology.Wegener's idea-thatthe continents move-is at the heart of the theory that guides Earth sciences today:namely plate tectonics.Plate tectonics is in many respects quite different from Wegener's proposal,in the same way that modern evolutionary theory is very diferent from the ideas Charles Darwin proposed in the 1850s about biological evolution.Yet    plate tectonics is a descendant of Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift,in quite  the same way that modern evolutionary theory is a descendant of Darwin's theory of natural selection.

When I started writing about Wegener's life and work,one of the most intriguing things  about him for me was that,although he came up with a theory on continental drift,he was not a geologist.He trained as an astronomer and pursued a career in atmospheric physics.When he proposed the theory of continental displacements in 1912.he was a lecturer in physics and astronomy at the University of Marburg,in southern Germany.However,he was not an 'unknown'.In 1906 he had set a world record (with his brother Kurt)for time aloft in a hot-air balloon:52 hours.Between 1906 and 1908  he had taken part in a highly publicized and extremely dangerous expedition to the coast of northeast Greenland.He had also made a name for himselfamongst a small circle of meteorologists and atmospheric physicists in Germany as the author of a textbook,Thermodynamics of the Atmosphere(1911),and of a number of interesting scientific papers.

As important as Wegener's work on continental drift has turned out to be,it was largely a sideline to his interest in atmospheric physics,geophysics,and paleoclimatology, and thus I have been at great pains to put Wegener's work on continental drift in the larger context of his other scientific work,and in the even larger context of atmospheric sciences in his lifetime.This is a'continental drift book only to the extent that Wegener was interested in that topic and later became famous for it.My treatment of his other scientific work is no less detailed,though I certainly have devoted more attention to the reception of his ideas on continental displacement,as they were much more controversial than his other work.

Readers interested in the specific detail of Wegener's career will see that he often stopped pursuing a given line of investigation (sometimes for years on end),only to pick it up later.I have tried to provide guideposts to his rapidly shifting interests by characterizing different phases of his life as careers in different sciences,which is reflected in the titles of the chapters.Thus,the index should be a sufficient guide for those interestedin a particular aspect of Wegener's life but perhaps not all of it.My own  feeling,however,is that the parts do not make as much sense on their own as do all of    his activities taken together.In this respect I urge readers to try to experience Wegener's life as he lived it,with all the interruptions,changes of mind,and renewed efforts this entailed.

Wegener left behind a few published works but,as was standard practice,these reported the results of his work-not the journey he took to reach that point.Only a few hundred ofthe many thousands of letters he wrote and received in his lifetime have survived and he didn't keep notebooks or diaries that recorded his life and activities.He was not active (with a few exceptions)in scientific societies,and did not seek to find influence or advance his ideas through professional contacts and politics, spending most of his time at home in his study reading and writing,or in the field collecting observations.

Some famous scientists,such as Newton,Darwin,and Einstein,left mountains of written material behind,hundreds of notebooks and letters numbering in the tens of thousands.  Others,like Michael Faraday,left extensive journals of their thoughts and speculations, parallel to their scientific notebooks.The more such material a scientist leaves behind, the better chance a biographer has of forming an accurate picture of how a scientist's ideas took shape and evolved.

I am firmly of the opinion that most of us,Wegener included,are not in any real sense the authors of our own lives.We plan,think,and act,often with apparent freedom, but most of the time our lives happen tous',and we only retrospectively turn this happenstance into a coherent narrative of fulfilled intentions.This book,therefore,is a story both ofthe life and scientific work that Alfred Wegener planned and intended and of the life and scientific work that actually'happened to him’.These are,as I think you  will soon see,not always the same thing.

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