IELTS READING; YES, NO, NOT GIVEN (7)

IELTS READING; YES, NO, NOT GIVEN (7)

11th Grade - Professional Development

14 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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IELTS READING; YES, NO, NOT GIVEN (7)

IELTS READING; YES, NO, NOT GIVEN (7)

Assessment

Quiz

English

11th Grade - Professional Development

Hard

Created by

George Alade

Used 17+ times

FREE Resource

14 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

 Dr Paul Olsen and his colleagues believe that asteroid knock may also lead to dinosaurs’ boom.

PASSAGE:

EVERYBODY knows that the dinosaurs were killed by an asteroid. Something big hit the earth 65 million years ago and, when the dust had fallen, so had the great reptiles. There is thus a nice if ironic, symmetry in the idea that a similar impact brought about the dinosaurs’ rise. That is the thesis proposed by Paul Olsen, of Columbia University, and his colleagues in this week’s Science.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

Books and movie like Jurassic Park often exaggerate the size of the dinosaurs.

PASSAGE:

Dinosaurs first appeared in the fossil record 230m years ago, during the Triassic period. But they were mostly small, and they shared the earth with lots of other sorts of reptile. It was in the subsequent Jurassic, which began 202 million years ago, that they overran the planet and turned into the monsters depicted in the book and movie “Jurassic Park”. (Actually, though, the dinosaurs that appeared on screen were from the still more recent Cretaceous period.) Dr Olsen and his colleagues are not the first to suggest that the dinosaurs inherited the earth as the result of an asteroid strike. But they are the first to show that the takeover did, indeed, happen in a geological eyeblink.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

Dinosaur footprints are more adequate than dinosaur skeletons.

PASSAGE:

Dinosaur skeletons are rare. Dinosaur footprints are, however, surprisingly abundant. And the sizes of the prints are as good an indication of the sizes of the beasts as are the skeletons themselves. Dr Olsen and his colleagues, therefore, concentrated on prints, not bones.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

The prints were chosen by Dr Olsen to study because they are more detectable than the earth magnetic field to track the date of geological precise within thousands of years.

PASSAGE:

The prints in question were made in eastern North America, a part of the world the full of rift valleys to those in East Africa today. Like the modern African rift valleys, the Triassic/Jurassic American ones contained lakes, and these lakes grew and shrank at regular intervals because of climatic changes caused by periodic shifts in the earth’s orbit. (A similar phenomenon is responsible for modern ice ages.) That regularity, combined with reversals in the earth’s magnetic field, which are detectable in the tiny fields of certain magnetic minerals, means that rocks from this place and period can be dated to within a few thousand years. As a bonus, squishy lake-edge sediments are just the things for recording the tracks of passing animals. By dividing the labour between themselves, the ten authors of the paper were able to study such tracks at 80 sites.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

Ichnotaxa showed that footprints of dinosaurs offer exact information of the trace left by an individual species.

PASSAGE:

The researchers looked at 18 so-called ichnotaxa. These are recognizable types of the footprint that cannot be matched precisely with the species of animal that left them. But they can be matched with a general sort of animal, and thus act as an indicator of the fate of that group, even when there are no bones to tell the story. Five of the ichnotaxa disappear before the end of the Triassic, and four march confidently across the boundary into the Jurassic. Six, however, vanish at the boundary, or only just splutter across it; and there appear from nowhere, almost as soon as the Jurassic begins

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

We can find more Iridium in the earth’s surface than in meteorites.

PASSAGE:

That boundary itself is suggestive. The first geological indication of the impact that killed the dinosaurs was an unusually high level of iridium in rocks at the end of the Cretaceous when the beasts disappear from the fossil record. Iridium is normally rare at the earth’s surface, but it is more abundant in meteorites. When people began to believe the impact theory, they started looking for other Cretaceous-and anomalies. One that turned up was a surprising abundance of fern spores in rocks just above the boundary layer – a phenomenon known as a “fern spike”.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

STATEMENT:

The colonization of Hawaii by geese provides evidence of continental drift.

PASSAGE:

Biogeographers can learn clues about continental drift by comparing related species. However, they must also recognize cases where species have spread for other reasons, such as by crossing great stretches of water. The island of Hawaii, for example, was home to a giant flightless goose that has become extinct. Studies on DNA extracted from its bones show that it evolved from the Canada goose. Having colonized Hawaii, it branched off from that species, losing its ability to fly. This evolution occurred half a million years ago, when geologists estimate that Hawaii emerged from the Pacific.

YES

NO

NOT GIVEN

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