1995年10月托福阅读真题与答案-智课教育旗下智课教育.pdf
文本预览下载声明
智 课 网 托 福 备 考 资 料
1995年10月托福阅读真题和答案-智课教育旗下智课教
育
1995年10月份托福阅读真题及答案
Questions 1-13
Atmospheric pressure can support a column of water up to
10 meters high. But plants can move water much higher, the
sequoia tree can pump water to its very top, more than 100
meters above the ground. Until the end of the nineteenth
century, the movement of water in trees and other tall plants was
a mystery. Some botanists hypothesized that the living cells of
plants acted as pumps, But many experiments demonstrated that
the stems of plants in which all the cells are killed can still move
water to appreciable heights. Other explanations for the
movement of water in plants have been based on root pressure,
a push on the water from the roots at the bottom of the plant.
But root pressure is not nearly great enough to push water to the
tops of tall trees. Furthermore, the conifers, which are among the
tallest trees, have unusually low root pressures. If water is not
pumped to the top of a tall tree, and if it is not pushed to the top
of a tall tree, then we may ask, How does it get there? According
to the currently accepted cohesion-tension theory, water is
pulled there. The pull on a rising column of water in a plant
results from the evaporation of water at the top of the plant. As
water is lost from the surface of the leaves, a negative pressure,
or tension, is created. The evaporated water is replaced by water
moving from inside the plant in unbroken columns that extend
from the top of a plant to its roots. The same forces that create
surface tension in any sample of water are responsible for the
maintenance of these unbroken columns of water. When water is
confined in tubes of very small bore, the forces of cohesion (the
attraction between water molecules) are so great that the
strength of a column of water compares with the strength of a
steel wire of the same diameter. This cohesive strength permits
显示全部