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READING PASSAGE 2

THE FALKIRK WHEEL

A unique engineering achievement

The Falkirk Wheel in Scotland is the worlds first and only rotating boat lift. Opened in 2002, it is central to the ambitious £84.5m Millennium Link project to restore navigability across Scotland by reconnecting the historic waterways of the Forth & Clyde and Union Canals.

The major challenge of the project lay in the fact that the Forth & Clyde Canal is situated 35 metres below the level of the Union Canal. Historically, the two canals had been joined near the town of Falkirk by a sequence of 11 locks - enclosed sections of canal in which the water level could be raised or lowered - that stepped down across a distance of 1.5 km. This had been dismantled in 1933, thereby breaking the link. When the project was launched in 1994, the British Waterways authority were keen to create a dramatic twenty-firstcentury landmark which would not only be a fitting commemoration of the Millennium, but also a lasting symbol of the economic regeneration of the region.

Numerous ideas were submitted for the project, including concepts ranging from rolling eggs to tilting tanks, from giant seesaws to overhead monorails. The eventual winner was a plan for the huge rotating steel boat lift which was to become The Falkirk Wheel. The unique shape of the structure is claimed to have been inspired by various sources, both manmade and natural, most notably a Celtic double-headed axe, but also the vast turning propeller of a ship, the propeller of a whale or the spine of a fish.

The various parts of The Falkirk Wheel were all constructed and assembled, like one giant toy building set, at Butterley Engineering’s Steelworks in Derbyshire, some 400 km from Falkirk. A team there carefully assembled the 1,200 tonnes of steel, painstakingly fitting the pieces together to an accuracy of just 1〇 mm to ensure a perfect final fit. In the summer of 2001, the structure was then dismantled and transported on 35 lorries to Falkirk, before all being bolted back together again on the ground, and finally lifted into position in five large sections by crane. The Wheel would need to withstand immense and constantly changing stresses as it rotated, so to make the structure more robust, the steel sections were bolted rather than welded together. Over 45,000 bolt holes were matched with their bolts, and each bolt was hand-tightened.

The Wheel consists of two sets of opposing axe-shaped arms, attached about 25 metres apart to a fixed central spine. Two diametrically opposed water-filled 'gondolas', each with a capacity of 360,000 litres, are fitted between the ends Of the arms. These gondolas always weigh the same, whether or not they are carrying boats. This is because, according to Archimedes' principle of displacement,floating objects displace their own weight in water. So when a boat enters a gondola, the amount of water leaving the gondola weighs exactly the same as the boat. This keeps the Wheel balanced and so, despite its enormous mass, it rotates through 1800 in five and a half minutes while using very little power. It takes just 1.5 kilowatt-hours (5.4 MJ) of energy to rotate the Wheel - roughly the same as boiling eight small domestic kettles of water.

Boats needing to be lifted up enter the canal basin at the level of the Forth & Clyde Canal and then enter the lower gondola of the Wheel. Two hydraulic steel gates are raised, so as to seal the gondola off from the water in the canal basin. The water between the gates is then pumped out. A hydraulic damp, which prevents the arms of the Wheel moving while the gondola is docked, is removed, allowing the Wheel to turn. In the central machine room an array often hydraulic motors then begins to rotate the central axle. The axle connects to the outer arms of the Wheel, which begin to rotate at a speed of 1/8 of a revolution per minute. As the wheel rotates, the gondolas are kept in the upright position by a simple gearing system. Two eight-metre-wide cogs orbit a fixed inner cog of the same width, connected by two smaller cogs travelling in the opposite direction to the outer cogs - so ensuring that the gondolas always remain level. When the gondola reaches the top, the boat passes straight onto the aqueduct situated 24 metres above the canal basin.

The remaining 11 metres of lift needed to reach the Union Canai is achieved by means of a pair of locks. The Wheel could not be constructed to elevate boats over the full 35-metre difference between the two canals, owing to the presence of the historically important Antonine Wall, which was built by the Romans in the second century AD. Boats travel under this wall via a tunnel, then through the locks, and finally on to the Union Canal.

There are six questions below
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2
Write your answers in boxes on your answer sheet.
              TRUE                  if the statement agrees with the information
              FALSE                 if the statement contradicts the information
              NOT GIVEN        if there is no information on this

The Falkirk Wheel has linked the Forth & Clyde Canal with the Union Canal for the first time in their history.

【参考答案】

FALSE

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问答题

There are ten questions below
Complete the notes below.
Write ONE WORD ONLY for each answer.

Оcean Biodiversity

Biodiversity hotspots
•    areas containing many different species
•    important for locating targets for 【C1】 ....................................
•    at first only identified on land

Boris Worm, 2005
•    
identified hotspots for large ocean predators, e.g. sharks
•    found that ocean hotspots:
- were not always rich in 【C2】 .............................
- had higher temperatures at the 【C3】....................................
- had sufficient 【C4】 ................................... in the water

Lisa Ballance, 2007
•    
looked for hotspots for marine 【C5】 .............................
•    found these were all located where ocean currents meet

Census of Marine Life
•    
found new ocean species living:
- under the 【C6】 .............................
- near volcanoes on the ocean floor

Global Marine Species Assessment
•    
want to list endangered ocean species, considering:
- population size
- geographical distribution
- rate of 【C7】.............................
•    Aim: to assess 20,000 species and make a distribution 【C8】............................. for each one

Recommendations to retain ocean biodiversity
•    
increase the number of ocean reserves
•    establish 【C9】 ................................... corridors (e.g. for turtles)
•    reduce fishing quotas
•    catch fish only for the purpose of 【C10】 .............................

【C1】

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