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[单选题]

He amassed a ______ fortune.

A.considerably

B.considerable

C.considerate

D.considered

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更多“He amassed a ______ fortune.”相关的问题
第1题
The World of the Flat-footed FlyGeorge Poinar has been fascinated by amber, and the insect

The World of the Flat-footed Fly

George Poinar has been fascinated by amber, and the insects embedded in it, since childhood. Now a professor of entomology at the Berkeley Campus of the University of California, he has successfully combined these interests to produce Life in Amber, a scholarly and yet very readable book. In it he tells the story of this curious, almost magical substance and the unique record of fossilized life that became trapped and entombed in the sticky resin as it oozed from the forest trees of the ancient past.

Amber has been endowed with special worth from prehistoric times, Adornments of amber have been found that date back as far as 35,000 BC, and in 1701, King Frederick I of Prussia commissioned an entire room made of amber as a gift for Peter the Great of Russia. Historically that probably represented the peak of value for amber. Since then our appreciation of it as a decorative material worth its weight in gold has declined somewhat. In Victorian times amber beads had something of a renaissance as an adornment. It now holds greater value as a potential store of fossil DNA.

Scientific interest in amber has also fluctuated. The embedded small organisms, particularly insects but also frogs and feathers, have always been part of amber's allure. In the first century AD, Pliny noted that amber was the discharge of a pine-like tree, originated in the north and often contained small insects. It was not until the 19th century that collection of the amber flora and fauna really got under way. The largest hoard was of Baltic origin, amassed by Wilhelm Stantien, an innkeeper, and Moritz Becker, a merchant. They took their collecting seriously and used mining techniques to extract pieces of amber from clays of Tertiary age that had formed during the Eocene, 38 million years ago, in the Samland peninsula, near Kaliningrad (the former Kbnigsberg) on the Russian Baltic seaboard. Their efforts resulted in about 120,000 amber-embedded animal and plant fossils. These were housed in the Geological Institute Museum at Kbnigsberg University. Unfortunately, despite being dispersed for safety during the Second World War much of this amazing collection was lost.

Although the depth of this unique view of the insect life in Baltic forests of Eocene age is sadly no longer available in a single collection, we can see something of it. There are still large collections of Baltic amber in public museums around the world but even in total they do not amount to much more than that one unrepeatable collection. The Natural History Museum in London has a "mere" 25,000 specimens.

Popular misconceptions about amber exist; for example, suggesting that it is the fossilized resin of coniferous trees from the Baltic region, and that its abundance is the result of some unusual condition of these ancient trees. It is true that an astonishing amount of amber has been recovered from this region. However, the most likely candidate to have produced the Baltic amber is an araucariacean tree similar to the living Agathis from New Zealand, which secretes resin. This could well accumulate in this order of magnitude, given the geological time scale of hundreds of thousands, if not million of years. And, as Poinar discusses, the Baltic region was only one of many different areas, on a worldwide scale, from the Dominican Republic, which is his own favourite hunting ground, to China and Romania, that produced amber in Tertiary times. Furthermore, amber resin producing trees are shown to have an extended geological history extending back to Cretaceous times, more than 100 million years ago and possibly as far back as the Carboniferous (more than 300 million years ago ). Many of these older ambers have not been rigorously investigated with modem techniques but Poinar has collected all the available published knowledge on their biological content.

&n

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第2题
Scientists have known for some time that certain plants, called hyperaccumu-lators, can co
ncentrate minerals at levels a hundredfold or greater than normal. A survey of known hyperaccumulators identified that 75 percent of them amassed nickel; cobalt, copper, zinc, manganese, lead, and cadmium are other minerals of choice. Hyperaccumulators run the entire range of the plant world. They may be herbs, shrubs, or trees. Many members of the mustard family, spurge family, legume family, and grass family are top hyperaccumulators. Many are found in tropical and subtropical areas of the world, where accumulation of high concentrations of metals may afford some protection against plant-eating insects and microbial pathogens.

Why does the author mention "herbs," "shrubs," and "trees"?

A.To provide examples of plant types that cannot tolerate high levels of harmful minerals

B.To show why so many plants are hyperaccumulators

C.To help explain why hyperaccumulators can be found in so many different places

D.To emphasize that hyperaccumulators occur in a wide range of plant types

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第3题
【34】

A.what he is like

B.what is he like

C.how he is

D.how is he

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第4题
He said he ______ (go to college)the next year.

He said he ______ (go to college)the next year.

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第5题
Never _____ such a nice chair

A.has he seen

B.he has seen

C.saw he

D.he saw

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第6题
He said he ______to Cambridge.A.goB.would goC.will go

He said he ______to Cambridge.

A.go

B.would go

C.will go

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第7题
— He never drinks milk, does he? — ______.A.Yes, he drinksB.Yes, he doesn'tC.No, he doesD.

— He never drinks milk, does he? — ______.

A.Yes, he drinks

B.Yes, he doesn't

C.No, he does

D.No, he doesn't

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第8题
He never said that he was good at mathematics, ______?A.was heB.wasn't heC.did heD.didn't

He never said that he was good at mathematics, ______?

A.was he

B.wasn't he

C.did he

D.didn't he

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第9题
He is but a child.

A.probably

B.not

C.hardly

D.only

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第10题
______ he tried, he was not successful.A.ForB.ButC.Although

______ he tried, he was not successful.

A.For

B.But

C.Although

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第11题
Which one is wrong about Benjamin Franklin?()A、He was also a Doctor.B、He loved reading.

A.He was also a Doctor.

B.He loved readin

C.He started the first public library in Philadelphi

D.He was 81 when he went to the Constitutional Convention.

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