【易伯华出品】雅思阅读机经真题解析-The Lost City
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Thanks to modern remote-sensing techniques, a ruined city in Turkey is slowly
revealing itself as one of the greatest and most mysterious cities of the
ancient world. Sally Palmer uncovers more.
A
The low granite mountain, known as Kerkencs Dag, juts from the northern edge
of the C'appadocian plain in Turkey. Sprawled over the mountainside are the rums
of an enormous city, contained by crumbling defensive walls seven kilometers
long. Many respected archaeologists believe these are the remains of the fabled
city of Plena, the sixth-century BC stronghold of the Mcdes that the Greek
historian Herodotus described in his famous work The Histories. The short-lived
city came under Median control and only fifty years later was sacked, burned and
its strong stone walls destroyed.
B

British archeologist Dr Geoffrey Summer has spent ten years studying the
site. Excavating the ruins is a challenge because of the vast area they cover.
The 7 km perimeter walls run around a site covering 271 hectares. Dr Summers
quickly realised it would take far too long to excavate the site using
traditional techniques alone. So he decided to use modem technology as well to
map the entire site, both above and beneath the surface, to locate the most
interesting areas and priorities to start digging.
C
In 1993. Dr Summers hired a special hand held balloon with a
remote-controlled camera attached. He walked over the entire site holding the
balloon and taking photos. Then one afternoon, he rented a hot-air balloon and
floated over the site, taking yet more pictures By the end of the 1994 season.
Dr Summers and his team had a jigsaw of aerial photographs of the whole site.
The next stage was to use remote sensing, which would let them work out what lay
below the intriguing outlines and ruined walls. "Archaeology is a discipline
that lends itself very well to remote sensing because it revolves around space,"
says Scott Branting, an associated director of the project, lie started working
with Dr Summers in 1995.
D
The project used two remote sensing techniques. The first is magnetometry
which works on the principle thai magnetic fields al the surface of the Earth
are influenced by what it buried beneath. It measures localised variations in
the direction and intensity of this magnetic field. "The Earth's magnetic field
can vary from place to place, depending on what happened there in the past."
says Branting. "if something containing iron oxide was heavily burnt, by natural
or human actions, the iron particles in it can be permanently reoriented, like a
compass needle, to align with the Earth's magnetic field present at that point
in time and space." The magnetometer detects differences in the orientations and
intensities of these iron particles from the present-day magnetic field and uses
them to produce an image of what lies below ground.
E
Kerkenes Dag lends itself particularly well to magnetometry because it was
all burnt at once in a savage fire. In places the heat was sufficient to turn
sandstone to glass and to melt granite. The fire was so hot that there were
strong magnetic signatures set to the Earth's magnetic field from the time -
around 547 BC - resulting in extremely clear pictures. Furthermore, the city was
never rebuilt, "if you have multiple layers confusing picture, because you have
different walls from different periods giving signatures that all go in
different directions," says Branting. "We only have one going down about 1.5
meters, so we can get a good picture of this fairly short-lived city”.
F
The other main sub-surface mapping technique, which is still being used at
the site, is resistivity. This technique measures the way electrical pulses arc
conducted through sub- surface soil. It's done by shooting pulses into the
ground through a thin metal probe. Different materials have different electrical
conductivity. For example, stone and mudbrick arc poor conductors, but looser,
damp soil conducts very well. By walking around the site and taking about four
readings per metre, it is possible to get a detailed idea of what is where
beneath the surface. The teams then build up pictures of walls, hearths and
other remains. "It helps a lot if it has rained, because the electrical pulse
can get through more easily," says Branting. "Then if something is more
resistant, it really shows up." This is one of the reasons that the project has
a spring season, when most of the resistivity work is done. Unfortunately
testing resistivity is a lot slower than magnetometry. "If we did (r the whole
site it would take about 100 years," says Branting. Consequently, the team is
concentrating on areas where they want to clarify pictures from the
magnetometry.
G
Remote sensing does not reveal everything about Kerkenes Dag, but it shows
the most interesting sub-surface areas of the site. The archaeologists can then
excavate these using traditional techniques. One surprise came when they dug out
one of the fates in the defensive walls. "Our observations in early seasons led
us to assume that wall, such as would be found at most other cities in the
Ancient Near East," says Dr Summers. "When we started to excavate we were
staggered to discover that the walls were made entirely from stone and that the
gate would have stood at least ten metres high. After ten years of study, Pteria
is gradually giving up its secrets."
Question 14-18
Reading Passage2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.
14. The reason why various investigative methods are introduced.
15. An example of an unexpected discovery.

16. The methods to surveyed the surface of the site from above.
17. The reason why experts want to study the site.
Question 18-25
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using no
more than THREE words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 18-25 on your answer sheet.
Exploring the Ancient City of Pteria
The relevant work was done ten year ago. To begin with, experts took photos
of the site from the ground and then from a distance in a 18______. To find
out what lay below the surface, they used two leading techniques. One was
magnetometer, which identifies changes in the magnetic field. These changes
occur when the 19________in buried structures have changed direction as a result
of great heat. They match with the magnetic field, which is similar to a
20________.
The other one was resistivity, which uses a 21____________to fire electrical
pulses into the earth. The principle is that building materials like
22_______and stone do not conduct electricity well, while 23________does this
much better. Archaeologists preferred to use this technique during the
24___________, when conditions are more favourable. Resistivity is mainly being
used to 25_________ some images generated by the magnetometer.
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