Конструктор тестів
1
Read the texts (1-6) and match the titles with the paragraphs (A-H).There are two choices you do not need to use.
A) Finding the evidence
B) The living continent
C) Small but significant
D) Making modern Antartica
E) Putting it all together
F) Joining another continent
G) An impossible idea
H) What's in a name?
1 Meet Mesosaurus, a small reptile which lived in fresh-water lakes and streams millions of years ago during the Lower Permain age. Mesosaurus has had a big impact on how we view our planet, because he helped to prove the existence of the super-continent called Gondwanaland.
1 [A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
2 Every schoolchild has probably looked at a map of the earth and noticed how Africa and South America fit together like pieces of a giant jigsaw, yet until just over a hundred and fifty years ago, no-one believed that this was more than an odd coincidence. It seemed impossible that the massive continents of the earth could ever be moved, let alone so far apart that they ended up half a planet from each other.
2 [A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
3 For many years super-continents were regarded as an interesting theory, but no-one knew how it might work in reality. Then the discovery of the mechanisms of plate tectonics showed how continents might drift across the face of the globe. Once it was accepted that the continents were floating on currents of lava, more evidence became apparent. A particular type of an early plant, the seed fern, was found on continents now scattered about the southern hemisphere of the world a deposit left by glaciers in the Permo-Carboniferous era of 520 million years ago. And Mesosaurus, the little fresh-water reptile, left his remains in West Africa and Brazil. Since Mesosaurus had no way of crossing the Atlantic, researchers realized that it could not be coincidence that this reptile had left remains in exactly the place where Africa and South America fit together so neatly.
3 [A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
4 By investigating similarities in animal fossils, different types of plants found in the southern hemisphere but not in the northern hemisphere, and patterns of rock formations, researchers have managed to put the continents of modern-day earth together like a huge jigsaw to make up the vanished super-continent. Sometimes rock formations can be seen to break off at the ocean's edge, to carry on once more thousands of miles away on another continent. The evidence shows that not only were Africa and South America once joined to Antartica, but so were India and Australia, parts of south Western Europe, and Florida.
4
[A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
5 Although Gondwanaland was located in the far southern hemisphere of the planet, where Antarctica remains today, the climate was much warmer, and we know that huge forests grew there. These forests, fossilized into coal, supply many Indians with energy today. The land animals were adapted to life on their cool continent, with its long dark winter days. Some of the best-known dinosaurs, such as Stegosaurus, Triceratops, and Tyrannosaurus lived on the northern continents, but Gondwanaland also had some fearsome predators such as Abelisaurus, a large meat-eater that lived during the cretaceous period. The seas were populated with fish called placoderms, a name which they get from their skin, which was so thick that they were practically armoured.
5
[A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
6 The break-up of Gondwanaland had huge consequences for planet earth as we know it now. In geological terms, India has been a sprinter. Breaking from Gondwanaland the sub-continent drifted rapidly northward from the south pole, finally smashing into Asia about 45 million years ago in a collision that raised the Himalayas.
6 [A) Finding the evidence, B) The living continent, C) Small but significant, D) Making modern Antartica, E) Putting it all together, F) Joining another continent, G) An impossible idea, H) What's in a name?]
2
Read the text below. For questions (1 – 6) choose the correct answer (A, B, C or D).
Askania-Nova nature reserve is one of the most ancient in Ukraine and even in the world and has been a base of wide scientific research for about one hundred years. It is located in the southern steppes of Ukraine in the driest part of the Black Sea lowlands between the Dnieper and the Molochna. In the times gone normadic tribes moved along its vast territory — Tavrichny steppe. Some of them left behind stone statues called ‘baby’. At the end of the 18th century large manors became to appear there. One of them was a manor of a German duke Angalt-Ketensky called ‘Askania-Nova’ in the memory of his estate ‘Askania’ in Germany. Then it was sold to a highly-educated biologist Phalts-Phein who did his best for preserving fauna and flora in the area. He established a unique zoo and dendropark. In 1898 he selected a new plot of virgin lands and proclaimed it to be ‘defended forever’. This year is considered to be the year of founding the steppe nature reserve Askania-Nova.
The climate of the reserve is continental with hot dry summer and changeable mild winter.
The virgin reserve steppe is the centre of Askania-Nova. It stretches for 20 km. from west to east and 9 km. from north to south. It is divided into three separate parts: Southern, Northern and Big Chapelsky.
Cereals prevail in the zone crop of grass though their number isn’t more than 15 species. The feather grass defines the most colourful and typical aspect of the reserve virgin land. But the most beautiful and the brightest steppe is undoubtedly in spring. It is the time of tulip flowering.
A part of the reserve territory is covered with parks: Old Park, New Park and the Ornithological park: we can observe various kinds of trees and shrubs in the reserve. The old dendrological park was founded in the landscape style where trees and shrubs alternate with picturesque glades everywhere. There is a pond surrounded by oaks, willows and poplars in the centre of the park. The main types of trees in Askania-Nova parks are ashes, black locusts and conifers (Crimean pine and Virginian juniper). Among shrubs the lilacs predominate.
Who moved along its vast territory – Tavrichny steppe?
[A) Slavonic tribes, B) Normandic tribes, C) Saxons, D) Jutes]
Why was Askania called in such a way?
[A) In the memory of the German estate, B) German duke liked that name, C) In the memory of the Belgian estat, D) In the memory of the French estate]
What year is considered to be the year of founding Askania-Nova?
[A) 1890, B) 1898, C) 1895, D) 1896]
How many parts is it divided into?
[A) 3, B) 4, C)2, D) 5]
When is the steppe the brightest?
[A) In summer, B) In spring, C) In autumn, D) In winter]
3
Read the text below. Choose from (A-H) the one which best fits each space (1-6). There are two choices you do not need to use.
[A) ever so, B) than ever, C) whatever, D) whichever, E) whenever, F) wherever, G) as ever, H) whoever] path you choose, you’ll get to the forest lodge in about two hours.
The people were [A) ever so, B) than ever, C) whatever, D) whichever, E) whenever, F) wherever, G) as ever, H) whoever]nice to us. They helped us a great deal.
[A) ever so, B) than ever, C) whatever, D) whichever, E) whenever, F) wherever, G) as ever, H) whoever] you go these days, you find the same fast food chains.
Today more people travel for pleasure [A) ever so, B) than ever, C) whatever, D) whichever, E) whenever, F) wherever, G) whoever, H) as ever] before.
[A) than ever, B) as ever, C) ever so, D) whatever, E) whichever, F) whenever, G) wherever, H) whoever] posted this comment, can’t have stayed at the hotel in question.
I am, [A) ever so, B) than ever, C) whatever, D) whichever, E) whenever, F) wherever, G) as ever, H) whoever] , impressed by the efficiency with which you organised our holiday.
A) ever so
B) than ever
C) whatever
D) whichever
E) whenever
F) wherever
G) as ever
H) whoever
Запитання №4 З вибором правильної відповіді у тексті
Рефлексія від 5 учнів
Сподобався:
Так: 3
Ні: 2
Зрозумілий:
Так: 4
Ні: 1
Потрібні роз'яснення:
Ні: 4
Так: 1