Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /home/formosam/public_html/phpBB3/includes/bbcode.php on line 112

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /home/formosam/public_html/phpBB3/includes/bbcode.php on line 112
FormosaMBA 傷心咖啡店 • 查看主题 - [問題]GWD31 Q22

[問題]GWD31 Q22

GMAT 考的是閱讀....閱讀....還是閱讀....

版主: shpassion, Traver0818

[問題]GWD31 Q22

帖子mulderhou » 2006-10-06 11:29

Anthropologists once thought that the ancestors of modern humans began to walk upright because it freed their hands to use stone tools, which they had begun to make as the species evolved a brain of increased size and mental capacity. But discoveries of the three-million-year-old fossilized remains of our hominid ancestor Australopithecus have yielded substantial anatomical evidence that upright walking appeared prior to the dramatic enlargement of the brain and the development of stone tools.

Walking on two legs in an upright posture (bipedal locomotion) is a less efficient proposition than walking on all fours (quadrupedal locomotion) because several muscle groups that the quadruped uses for propulsion must instead to (?) provide the biped with stability and control. The shape and configuration of various bones must likewise be modified to allow the muscles to perform these functions in upright walking. Reconstruction of the pelvis (hipbones) and femur (thighbone) of “Lucy”, a three-million-year-old skeleton that is the most complete fossilized skeleton from the australopithecine era, has shown that they are much more like the corresponding bones of the modern human than like those of the most closely related living primate, the quadrupedal chimpanzee. Lucy’s wide, shallow pelvis is actually better suited to bipedal walking than is the rounder, bowl-like pelvis of the modern human, which (?) evolved to form the larger birth canal needed to accommodate the head of a large-brained human infant. By contrast, the head of Lucy’s baby could have been no larger than that of a baby chimpanzee.

If the small-brained australopithecines were not toolmakers, what evolutionary advantage did they gain by walking upright? (Line 50) One theory is that bipedality evolved in conjunction with the nuclear family: monogamous parents cooperating to care for their offspring. Walking upright permitted the father to use his hands to gather food and carry it to his mate from a distance, allowing the mother to devote more time and energy to nurturing and protecting their children. According to this view, the transition to bipedal walking may have occurred as long as ten million years ago, at the time of the earliest hominids, making it a crucial initiating event in human evolution.

22: According to the passage, the hominid australopithecine most closely resembled a modern human with respect to which of the following characteristics?
A: brain size
B: tool making ability
C: shape of the pelvis
D: method of locomotion
E: preference for certain foods

這題CD上多數人都說答案是D(我選的是C) , 但是這答案要如何從文章中找出定位呢? 麻煩大家了 , 謝謝~~
mulderhou
初級會員
初級會員
 
帖子: 29
注册: 2006-08-09 12:31

Re: [問題]GWD31 Q22

帖子eiswein » 2006-10-13 00:40

mulderhou \$m[1]:
22: According to the passage, the hominid australopithecine most closely resembled a modern human with respect to which of the following characteristics?
A: brain size
B: tool making ability
C: shape of the pelvis
D: method of locomotion
E: preference for certain foods

這題CD上多數人都說答案是D(我選的是C) , 但是這答案要如何從文章中找出定位呢? 麻煩大家了 , 謝謝~~


修正一下...是D沒錯.

Lucy’s wide, shallow pelvis is actually better suited to bipedal walking than is the rounder, bowl-like pelvis of the modern human, which (?) evolved to form the larger birth canal needed to accommodate the head of a large-brained human infant. By contrast, the head of Lucy’s baby could have been no larger than that of a baby chimpanzee.
头像
eiswein
中級會員
中級會員
 
帖子: 181
注册: 2006-04-13 21:53
地址: Ann Arbor, Michigan


回到 GMAT Reading Comprehension 考區

在线用户

正在浏览此版面的用户:没有注册用户 和 5 位游客