Directions: There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage is
followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are
four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and then
mark the corresponding letter on the ANSWER SHEET with a single line through the
center.
A scorching sun, an endless sea of sand
and a waterless, forbiddingly lonely land--that is the image most people have of
deserts. But how true is this picture Deserts are drylands where rainfall is
low. This is not to say rain never falls in deserts. It may fall once or twice a
year in a fierce torrent that fades almost as soon as it has begun, or which
evaporates in the hot air long before it has got anywhere near the earth. It may
fall in a sudden sweeping flood that carries everything in its path. Rains may
only come once in five or six years or not fall for a decade or more. The Mojave
desert in the United States remained dry for twenty-five years.
Without water no living thing can survive, and one feature of the desert
landscape is the absence of vegetation. With little rain and hardly any
vegetation the land suffers under the sun. There are virtually no clouds or
trees to protect the earth’s surface and it can be burning hot. Under the sun,
soils break up and crack. Wind and torrential rain sweep away and erode the
surface further. Eight million square kilometers of the world’s land surface is
desert. Throughout history deserts have been expanding and retreating again.
Cave paintings show that parts of the Sahara Desert were green and fertile about
10, 000 years ago, and even animals like elephants and giraffes roamed the land.
Fossil and dunes found in fertile and damp parts of the world show that these
areas were once deserts. But now the creation of new desert areas is happening
on a colossal scale. Twenty million square kilometers, an area twice the size of
Canada, is at a high to very high risk of becoming desert. With a further 1.25
million square kilometers under moderate risk, an area covering 30% of the
earth’s land surface is desert, becoming desert, or in danger of becoming
desert. The rate of growth of deserts is alarming. The world’s drylands which
are under threat include some of the most important stock-rearing and
wheat-growing areas and are the homes of 600 - 700 million people. These regions
are becoming deserts at the rate of more than 58, 000 square kilometers a year
or 44 hectares a minute. In North Africa at least 100, 000 hectares of cropland
are lost each year. At this rate there is a high risk that we will be confined
to living on only 50% of this planet’s land surface within one more century
unless we are able to do something about it. What does the passage tell us about rainfall in the desert
A. It never rains.
B. It rains so little that nothing can live.
C. It rains unexpectedly.
D. It rains very infrequently.