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高級(jí)英語 Advanced English(張漢熙) 第一冊 3.Ships in the Desert

所屬教程:高級(jí)英語 Advanced English(張漢熙) 第一冊

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Ships in the Desert

I was standing in the sun on the hot steel deck of a fishing ship capable of processing a fifty-ton catch on a good day. But it wasn' t a good day. We were anchored in what used to be the most productive fishing site in all of central Asia, but as I looked out over the bow , the prospects of a good catch looked bleak. Where there should have been gentle blue-green waves lapping against the side of the ship, there was nothing but hot dry sand – as far as I could see in all directions. The other ships of the fleet were also at rest in the sand, scattered in the dunes that stretched all the way to the horizon . Ten year s ago the Aral was the fourth-largest inland sea in the world, comparable to the largest of North America's Great Lakes. Now it is disappearing because the water that used to feed it has been diverted in an ill-considered irrigation scheme to grow cotton In the user t. The new shoreline was almost forty kilometers across the sand from where the fishing fleet was now permanently docked. Meanwhile, in the nearby town of Muynak the people were still canning fish – brought not from the Aral Sea but shipped by rail through Siberia from the Pacific Ocean, more than a thousand miles away.

My search for the underlying causes of the environmental crisis has led me to travel around the world to examine and study many of these images of destruction. At the very bottom of the earth, high in the Trans-Antarctic Mountains, with the sun glaring at midnight through a hole in the sky, I stood in the unbelievable coldness and talked with a scientist in the late tall of 1988 about the tunnel he was digging through time. Slipping his parka back to reveal a badly burned face that was cracked and peeling, he pointed to the annual layers of ice in a core sample dug from the glacier on which we were standing. He moved his finger back in time to the ice of two decades ago. "Here's where the U. S Congress passed the Clean Air Act, ” he said. At the bottom of the world, two continents away from Washington, D. C., even a small reduction in one country's emissions had changed the amount of pollution found in the remotest end least accessible place on earth.

But the most significant change thus far in the earth' s atmosphere is the one that began with the industrial r evolution early in the last century and has picked up speed ever since. Industry meant coal, and later oil, and we began to burn lots of it – bringing rising levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) , with its ability to trap more heat in the atmosphere and slowly warm the earth. Fewer than a hundred yards from the South Pole, upwind from the ice runway where the ski plane lands and keeps its engines running to prevent the metal parts from freeze-locking together, scientists monitor the air sever al times ever y day to chart the course of that inexorable change. During my visit, I watched one scientist draw the results of that day's measurements, pushing the end of a steep line still higher on the graph. He told me how easy it is – there at the end of the earth – to see that this enormous change in the global atmosphere is still picking up speed.

Two and a half years later I slept under the midnight sun at the other end of our planet, in a small tent pitched on a twelve-toot-thick slab of ice floating in the frigid Arctic Ocean. After a hearty breakfast, my companions and I traveled by snowmobiles a few miles farther north to a rendezvous point where the ice was thinner – only three and a half feet thick – and a nuclear submarine hovered in the water below. After it crashed through the ice, took on its new passengers, and resubmerged, I talked with scientists who were trying to measure more accurately the thickness of the polar ice cap, which many believe is thinning as a re-suit of global warming. I had just negotiated an agreement between ice scientists and the U. S. Navy to secure the re-lease of previously top secret data from submarine sonar tracks, data that could help them learn what is happening to the north polar cap. Now, I wanted to see the pole it-self, and some eight hours after we met the submarine, we were crashing through that ice, surfacing, and then I was standing in an eerily beautiful snowcape, windswept and sparkling white, with the horizon defined by little hummocks, or "pressure ridges " of ice that are pushed up like tiny mountain ranges when separate sheets collide. But here too, CD, levels are rising just as rapidly, and ultimately temperature will rise with them – indeed, global warming is expected to push temperatures up much more rapidly in the polar regions than in the rest of the world. As the polar air warms, the ice her e will thin; and since the polar cap plays such a crucial role in the world's weather system, the consequences of a thinning cap could be disastrous.

Considering such scenarios is not a purely speculative exercise. Six months after I returned from the North Pole, a team of scientists reported dramatic changes in the pattern of ice distribution in the Arctic, and a second team reported a still controversialclaim (which a variety of data now suggest) that, over all, the north polar cap has thinned by 2 per cent in just the last decade. Moreover, scientists established several years ago that in many land areas north of the Arctic Circle, the spring snowmelt now comes earlier every year, and deep in the tundra below, the temperature e of the earth is steadily rising.

As it happens, some of the most disturbing images of environmental destruction can be found exactly halfway between the North and South poles – precisely at the equator in Brazil – where billowing clouds of smoke regularly black-en the sky above the immense but now threatened Amazon rain forest. Acre by acre, the rain forest is being burned to create fast pasture for fast-food beef; as I learned when I went there in early 1989, the fires are set earlier and earlier in the dry season now, with more than one Tennessee's worth of rain forest being slashed and burned each year. According to our guide, the biologist Tom Lovejoy, there are more different species of birds in each square mile of the Amazon than exist in all of North America – which means we are silencing thousands of songs we have never even heard.

But one doesn't have to travel around the world to wit-ness humankind's assault on the earth. Images that signal the distress of our global environment are now commonly seen almost anywhere. On some nights, in high northern latitudes, the sky itself offers another ghostly image that signals the loss of ecological balance now in progress. If the sky is clear after sunset -- and it you are watching from a place where pollution hasn't blotted out the night sky altogether -- you can sometimes see a strange kind of cloud high in the sky. This "noctilucent cloud" occasionally appears when the earth is first cloaked in the evening dark-ness; shimmering above us with a translucent whiteness, these clouds seem quite unnatural. And they should: noctilucent clouds have begun to appear more often because of a huge buildup of methane gas in the atmosphere. (Also called natural gas, methane is released from landfills , from coal mines and rice paddies, from billions of termites that swarm through the freshly cut forestland, from the burning of biomass and from a variety of other human activities. ) Even though noctilucent clouds were sometimes seen in the past., all this extra methane carries more water vapor into the upper atmosphere, where it condenses at much higher altitudes to form more clouds that the sun's rays still strike long after sunset has brought the beginning of night to the surface far beneath them.

What should we feel toward these ghosts in the sky? Simple wonder or the mix of emotions we feel at the zoo? Perhaps we should feel awe for our own power: just as men "ear tusks from elephants’ heads in such quantity as to threaten the beast with extinction, we are ripping matter from its place in the earth in such volume as to upset the balance between daylight and darkness. In the process, we are once again adding to the threat of global warming, be-cause methane has been one of the fastest-growing green-house gases, and is third only to carbon dioxide and water vapor in total volume, changing the chemistry of the upper atmosphere. But, without even considering that threat, shouldn't it startle us that we have now put these clouds in the evening sky which glisten with a spectral light? Or have our eyes adjusted so completely to the bright lights of civilization that we can't see these clouds for what they are – a physical manifestation of the violent collision between human civilization and the earth?

Even though it is sometimes hard to see their meaning, we have by now all witnessed surprising experiences that signal the damage from our assault on the environment --whether it's the new frequency of days when the temperature exceeds 100 degrees, the new speed with which the -un burns our skin, or the new constancy of public debate over what to do with growing mountains of waste. But our response to these signals is puzzling. Why haven't we launched a massive effort to save our environment? To come at the question another way' Why do some images startle us into immediate action and focus our attention or ways to respond effectively? And why do other images, though sometimes equally dramatic, produce instead a Kin. of paralysis, focusing our attention not on ways to respond but rather on some convenient, less painful distraction?

Still, there are so many distressing images of environ-mental destruction that sometimes it seems impossible to know how to absorb or comprehend them. Before considering the threats themselves, it may be helpful to classify them and thus begin to organize our thoughts and feelings so that we may be able to respond appropriately.

A useful system comes from the military, which frequently places a conflict in one of three different categories, according to the theater in which it takes place. There are "local" skirmishes, "regional" battles, and "strategic" conflicts. This third category is reserved for struggles that can threaten a nation's survival and must be under stood in a global context. Environmental threats can be considered in the same way. For example, most instances of water pollution, air pollution, and illegal waste dumping are essentially local in nature. Problems like acid rain, the contamination of under-ground aquifers, and large oil spills are fundamentally regional. In both of these categories, there may be so many similar instances of particular local and regional problems occurring simultaneously all over the world that the patter n appears to be global, but the problems themselves are still not truly strategic because the operation of- the global environment is not affected and the survival of civilization is not at stake.

However, a new class of environmental problems does affect the global ecological system, and these threats are fundamentally strategic. The 600 percent increase in the amount of chlorine in the atmosphere during the last forty years has taken place not just in those countries producing the chlorofluorocarbons responsible but in the air above every country, above Antarctica, above the North Pole and the Pacific Ocean – all the way from the surface of the earth to the top of the sky. The increased levels of chlorine disrupt the global process by which the earth regulates the amount of ultraviolet radiation from the sun that is allowed through the atmosphere to the surface; and it we let chlorine levels continue to increase, the radiation levels will al-so increase – to the point that all animal and plant life will face a new threat to their survival.

Global warming is also a strategic threat. The concentration of carbon dioxide and other heat-absorbing molecules has increased by almost 25 per cent since World War II, posing a worldwide threat to the earth's ability to regulate the amount of heat from the sun retained in the atmosphere. This increase in heat seriously threatens the global climate equilibrium that determines the pattern of winds, rainfall, surface temperatures, ocean currents, and sea level. These in turn determine the distribution of vegetative and animal life on land and sea and have a great effect on the location and pattern of human societies.

In other words, the entire relationship between humankind and the earth has been transformed because our civilization is suddenly capable of affecting the entire global environment, not just a particular area. All of us know that human civilization has usually had a large impact on the environment; to mention just one example, there is evidence that even in prehistoric times, vast areas were sometimes intentionally burned by people in their search for food. And in our own time we have reshaped a large part of the earth's surface with concrete in our cities and carefully tended rice paddies, pastures, wheat fields, and other croplands in the countryside. But these changes, while sometimes appearing to be pervasive , have, until recently, been relatively trivial factors in the global ecological sys-tem. Indeed, until our lifetime, it was always safe to assume that nothing we did or could do would have any lasting effect on the global environment. But it is precisely that assumption which must now be discarded so that we can think strategically about our new relationship to the environment.

Human civilization is now the dominant cause of change in the global environment. Yet we resist this truth and find it hard to imagine that our effect on the earth must now be measured by the same yardstick used to calculate the strength of the moon's pull on the oceans or the force of the wind against the mountains. And it we are now capable of changing something so basic as the relationship between the earth and the sun, surely we must acknowledge a new responsibility to use that power wisely and with appropriate restraint. So far, however, We seem oblivious of the fragility of the earth's natural systems.

This century has witnessed dramatic changes in two key factors that define the physical reality of our relation-ship to the earth: a sudden and startling surge in human population, with the addition of one China's worth of people every ten years, and a sudden acceleration of the scientific and technological revolution, which has allowed an almost unimaginable magnification of our power to affect the world around us by burning, cutting, digging, moving, and trans-forming the physical matter that makes up the earth. The surge in population is both a cause of the changed relationship and one of the clearest illustrations of how startling the change has been, especially when viewed in a historical context. From the emergence of modern humans 200 000 years ago until Julius Caesar's time, fewer than 250 million people walked on the face of the earth. When Christopher Columbus set sail for the New World 1500 years later, there were approximately 500 million people on earth. By the time Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence in 1776, the number had doubled again, to 1 billion. By midway through this century, at the end of World War II, the number had risen to just above 2 billion people. In other words, from the beginning of humanity's appearance on earth to 1945, it took more than ten thousand generations to reach a world population of 2 billion people. Now, in the course of one human lifetime -- mine -- the world population will increase from 2 to more than 9 million, and it is already more than halfway there.

Like the population explosion, the scientific and technological revolution began to pick up speed slowly during the eighteenth century. And this ongoing revolution has also suddenly accelerated exponentially. For example, it is now an axiom in many fields of science that more new and important discoveries have taken place in the last ten years that. in the entire previous history of science. While no single discover y has had the kind of effect on our relationship to the earth that unclear weapons have had on our relationship to warfare, it is nevertheless true that taken together, they have completely transformed our cumulative ability to exploit the earth for sustenance -- making the consequences, of unrestrained exploitation every bit as unthinkable as the consequences of unrestrained nuclear war.

Now that our relationship to the earth has changed so utterly, we have to see that change and understand its implications. Our challenge is to recognize that the startling images of environmental destruction now occurring all over the world have much more in common than their ability to shock and awaken us. They are symptoms of an underlying problem broader in scope and more serious than any we have ever faced. Global warming, ozone depletion, the loss of living species, deforestation -- they all have a common cause: the new relationship between human civilization and the earth's natural balance. There are actually two aspects to this challenge. The first is to realize that our power to harm the earth can in-deed have global and even permanent effects. The second is to realize that the only way to understand our new role as a co-architect of nature is to see ourselves as part of a complex system that does not operate according to the same simple rules of cause and effect we are used to. The problem is not our effect on the environment so much as our relationship with the environment. As a result, any solution to the problem will require a careful assessment of that relationship as well as the complex interrelationship among factors within civilization and between them and the major natural components of the earth's ecological system.

There is only one precedent for this kind of challenge to our thinking, and again it is military. The invention of nuclear weapons and the subsequent development by the Unit-ed States and the Soviet Union of many thousands of strategic nuclear weapons forced a slow and painful recognition that the new power thus acquired forever changed not only the relationship between the two superpowers but also the relationship of humankind to the institution at war-fare itself. The consequences of all-out war between nations armed with nuclear weapons suddenly included the possibility of the destruction of both nations – completely and simultaneously. That sobering realization led to a careful reassessment of every aspect of our mutual relationship to the prospect of such a war. As early as 1946 one strategist concluded that strategic bombing with missiles "may well tear away the veil of illusion that has so long obscured the reality of the change in warfare – from a fight to a process of destruction.”

Nevertheless, during the earlier stages of the nuclear arms race, each of the superpower s assumed that its actions would have a simple and direct effect on the thinking of the other. For decades, each new advance in weaponry was deployed by one side for the purpose of inspiring fear in the other. But each such deployment led to an effort by the other to leapfrog the first one with a more advanced deployment of its own. Slowly, it has become apparent that the problem of the nuclear arms r ace is not primarily caused by technology. It is complicated by technology, true; but it arises out of the relationship between the superpowers and is based on an obsolete understanding of what war is all about.

The eventual solution to the arms race will be found, not in a new deployment by one side or the other of some ultimate weapon or in a decision by either side to disarm unilaterally , but ratter in new understandings and in a mutual transformation of the relationship itself. This transformation will involve changes in the technology of weaponry and the denial of nuclear technology to rogue states. But the key changes will be in the way we think about the institution of war far e and about the relationship between states.

The strategic nature of the threat now posed by human civilization to the global environment and the strategic nature of the threat to human civilization now posed by changes in the global environment present us with a similar set of challenges and false hopes. Some argue that a new ultimate technology, whether nuclear power or genetic engineering, will solve the problem. Others hold that only a drastic reduction of our reliance on technology can improve the conditions of life -- a simplistic notion at best. But the real solution will be found in reinventing and finally healing the relationship between civilization and the earth. This can only be accomplished by undertaking a careful reassessment of all the factors that led to the relatively recent dramatic change in the relationship. The transformation of the way we relate to the earth will of course involve new technologies, but the key changes will involve new ways of thinking about the relationship itself.

沙漠之舟

艾爾o戈?duì)?/p>

我頭頂烈日站在一艘漁船的滾燙的鋼甲板上。這艘漁船在豐收季節(jié)一天所處理加工的魚可達(dá)15噸。但現(xiàn)在可不是豐收季節(jié)。這艘漁船此時(shí)此刻停泊的地方雖說曾是整個(gè)中亞地區(qū)最大的漁業(yè)基地,但當(dāng)我站在船頭向遠(yuǎn)處眺望時(shí),卻看出漁業(yè)豐收的希望非常渺茫。極目四顧,原先那種湛藍(lán)色海濤輕拍船舷的景象已不復(fù)存在,取而代之的是茫茫的一片干燥灼熱的沙漠。漁船隊(duì)的其他漁船也都擱淺在沙漠上,散見于陂陀起伏、綿延至天邊的沙丘間。十年前,咸海還是世界上第四大內(nèi)陸湖泊,可與北美大湖區(qū)五大湖中的最大湖泊相媲美。而今,由于興建了一項(xiàng)考慮欠周的水利工程,原來注入此湖的水被引入沙漠灌溉棉田,咸海這座大湖的水面已漸漸變小,新形成的湖岸距離這些漁船永遠(yuǎn)停泊的位置差不多有40公里遠(yuǎn)。與此同時(shí),這兒附近的莫里那克鎮(zhèn)上人們?nèi)栽谏a(chǎn)魚罐頭,但所用的魚已不是咸海所產(chǎn),而是從一千多英里以外的太平洋漁業(yè)基地穿越西伯利亞運(yùn)到這兒來的。

我因要對造成環(huán)境危機(jī)的原因進(jìn)行調(diào)查而得以周游世界,考察和研究許多類似這樣破壞生態(tài)環(huán)境的事例。一九八八年深秋時(shí)節(jié),我來到地球的最南端。高聳的南極山脈中太陽在午夜穿過天空中的一個(gè)孔洞照射著地面,我站在令人難以置信的寒冷中,與一位科學(xué)家進(jìn)行著一場談話,內(nèi)容是他正在挖掘的時(shí)間隧道。這位科學(xué)家一撩開他的派克皮大衣,我便注意到他臉上因烈日的曝曬而皮膚皸裂,干裂的皮屑正一層層地剝落。他一邊講話一邊指給我看。從我們腳下的冰川中挖出的一塊巖心標(biāo)本上的年層。他將手指.到二十年前的冰層上,告訴我說,"這兒就是美國國會(huì)審議通過化空氣法案的地方。"這里雖處地球之頂端,距美國首都華盛頓兩大洲之遙,但世界上任何一個(gè)國家只要將廢氣排放量減少一席在空氣污染程度上引起的相應(yīng)變化便能在南極這個(gè)地球上最偏而人跡難至的地方反映出來。

迄今為止,地球大氣層最重要的變化始于上世紀(jì)初的工業(yè)命,變化速度自那以后逐漸加快。工業(yè)意味著先是煤、后是石油消耗。我們?nèi)紵舜罅康拿汉褪?-導(dǎo)致大氣層二氧化碳含的增加,這就使更多的熱量得以留存在大氣層中,從而使地球的候逐漸變暖。離南極極點(diǎn)不到一百碼遠(yuǎn),在雪上飛機(jī)降落的冰鋪道上風(fēng)處,科學(xué)家們一日數(shù)次地測量大氣,以便繪制圖表記錄下無情的變化。雪上飛機(jī)在冰鋪跑道上降落后,引擎仍得保持運(yùn)聾以防金屬部件凍住而無法發(fā)動(dòng)。在我訪問期間,我觀看了一位科家繪出那天的測量結(jié)果,把圖表上一條斜度很大的上升的線再上推進(jìn)。他告訴我--在這地球的盡頭--很容易看清全球大層的巨大變化的速度仍在加快。

兩年半以后,在地球的另一端,在寒冷至極的北冰洋上漂浮的一塊十二英尺厚的冰板上搭起的小帳篷里我又體驗(yàn)到了在午的陽光下睡覺的滋味。飽吃了一頓早餐后,我和同伴們一起乘雪防滑汽車北行數(shù)英里,到了約定會(huì)合地點(diǎn),那兒的冰層較薄--有三英尺半厚--水下有一艘核潛艇在那兒徘徊著。潛艇破冰上來,載上新的乘客后又潛了下去。我也就開始同那些正設(shè)法以高的精確度測量極地冰帽厚度的科學(xué)家們進(jìn)行交談。許多人認(rèn)北極冰層由于地球氣候的轉(zhuǎn)暖而正在變薄。此前我剛剛通過談使美國海軍方面與研究北極冰層的科學(xué)家達(dá)成協(xié)議,向他們提由水下聲納系統(tǒng)探測得到的本來屬于最高機(jī)密的有關(guān)資料,這資料有助于他們了解北極冰層所發(fā)生的情況?,F(xiàn)在我想實(shí)地考一下北極極點(diǎn)。我們登上潛艇約八個(gè)小時(shí)后,潛艇沖破冰層浮上面。于是,我便置身于一片神奇瑰麗的冰雪世界中。雪原上寒風(fēng)勁掃,銀光閃耀,其邊緣則是一道由連綿起伏的小冰丘或由冰席相撞、相互擠壓而形成小型山脈的冰層"壓脊"勾勒出的地平線。但即使在這兒,空氣中二氧化碳的含量也在不斷上升,最后氣溫也必然會(huì)隨之上升--事實(shí)上,地球氣候變暖會(huì)使南北極地區(qū)在氣溫上升的速度上遠(yuǎn)高于世界的其他地區(qū)。隨著極地氣溫的升高,這里的冰層會(huì)融化變薄。由于南北極的冰帽對全球的氣候有著至關(guān)重要的調(diào)節(jié)作用,它們的融化將會(huì)帶來災(zāi)難性的后果。

探索這些問題并不是一種純理論性的工作。我從北極回來后過了六個(gè)月,就有一隊(duì)科學(xué)家報(bào)稱北極冰層的分布結(jié)構(gòu)已發(fā)生顯著變化;另一隊(duì)科學(xué)家則在考察報(bào)告中提出了一個(gè)更有爭議的說法(如今已有大量資料可以佐證):總體說來,僅在過去十年當(dāng)中,北極冰層已融化了百分之二。另外,科學(xué)家們還在幾年前就已證實(shí),在北極圈以北的許多地區(qū),春季雪融的時(shí)間逐年提前,而且凍土帶的地下深處的溫度都在穩(wěn)步上升。

湊巧的是,破壞生態(tài)環(huán)境的一些最典型的、最令人擔(dān)憂的事例剛好都發(fā)生在南北極正中間的地方--巴西境內(nèi)的赤道帶上--那兒滾滾濃煙時(shí)常彌漫著遼闊但現(xiàn)又面臨著破壞的亞馬孫熱帶雨林的上空。亞馬孫雨林正被人們大片大片地?zé)龤?,以便騰出空地作飼養(yǎng)速食肉牛的牧場。我1989年初去那兒時(shí)得知,現(xiàn)在旱季時(shí)節(jié)放火焚燒森林的時(shí)間正逐年提前,其結(jié)果是每年都有面積比整個(gè)田納西州還大的大片森林遭到砍伐焚燒。據(jù)給我們當(dāng)向?qū)У纳飳W(xué)家湯姆o洛夫喬伊介紹,亞馬孫雨林中每平方英里的林區(qū)棲息的禽鳥種類多于整個(gè)北美洲現(xiàn)存的禽鳥種類--這就意味著我們正在使成千上萬種我們從來沒有聽到過的飛禽的歌聲永遠(yuǎn)消失。

人們也不一定非要周游世界才能目睹人類對地球的破壞。今天的世界上,預(yù)示著地球生態(tài)危機(jī)的景象已是隨處可見。在北方高緯度地區(qū),夜晚的天空有時(shí)也會(huì)呈現(xiàn)出另一種預(yù)示地球上日趨嚴(yán)重的生態(tài)失衡的陰森景象。假如日落后天空明朗無云--而且你又置身于一個(gè)空氣污染還沒有嚴(yán)重到足以完全遮蔽夜空的地方進(jìn)行觀察的話--你會(huì)看見天空高處有時(shí)會(huì)出現(xiàn)一種奇異的云團(tuán)。這種"夜光云團(tuán)"偶爾出現(xiàn)于夜幕開始籠罩大地的時(shí)候,它呈半透明的白色,在高空中閃爍發(fā)光,看起來頗不像自然之物。其實(shí),這種云團(tuán)也確非自然之物:近年來由于大氣中甲烷含量的大幅度增高,夜光云團(tuán)的出現(xiàn)頻率也隨著上升了。(甲烷又稱天然氣,它產(chǎn)生于填土、煤礦、糠殼、新砍伐的林地里群聚的白蟻、燃燒生物以及人類許多其他的活動(dòng)過程中。)雖說過去天空偶爾也出現(xiàn)過夜光云團(tuán),但大氣層中所含的那些過量的甲烷會(huì)將更多的水蒸氣帶到高層大氣中;水蒸氣在更高處凝結(jié),會(huì)形成更厚的云層,夜幕降臨以后很久,這些位于高空的云層下方還在受著太陽光的照射。

對天空中出現(xiàn)的這些奇異現(xiàn)象我們應(yīng)當(dāng)如何看待呢?是僅僅嘆為奇觀還是懷著像我們在動(dòng)物園中觀看動(dòng)物時(shí)感受到的那種復(fù)雜的感情?也許我們應(yīng)當(dāng)為自己所具有的破壞力而驚奇贊嘆:正如人類由于大量獵取象牙致使大象面臨滅種威脅一樣,我們今天正由于大量糟蹋和破壞地球上的自然資源而使白天和黑夜之間的平衡遭到破壞。我們的這種行為更進(jìn)一步地增加了地球變暖的危險(xiǎn),因?yàn)榧淄槭且环N形成速度極快韻溫室效應(yīng)氣體,它在大氣中的總含量僅次于二氧化碳和水蒸氣,使高空大氣層的化學(xué)成分都發(fā)生了變化。即使不去考慮這種危險(xiǎn),但只要意識(shí)到我們讓這些閃爍著陰森森的鬼火般光亮的云團(tuán)籠罩著自己頭頂上的夜空,這還不就足以令我們警醒嗎?難道說是我們的眼睛因?yàn)檫^分習(xí)慣于人類文明之光而對這些云團(tuán)視而不見--看不出它們乃是人類文明同地球之間的激烈沖突的一種具體表現(xiàn)形式嗎?

盡管有時(shí)很難理解其真正含義,我們大家都曾耳聞目睹過一些反映人類對生態(tài)環(huán)境造成破壞的驚人的現(xiàn)象--或是氣溫超過一百度的高溫天氣出現(xiàn)頻率的增加,或是太陽灼傷人的皮膚的速度的加快,或是公眾對越積越多的廢物該如何處理這一問題進(jìn)行討論的熱情的高漲。但是,我們大家對這些現(xiàn)象所作的反應(yīng)卻很有點(diǎn)奇怪。我們?yōu)楹尾徊扇∏袑?shí)有效的行動(dòng)來保護(hù)生態(tài)環(huán)境呢?這個(gè)問題也可以換一種方式來問:為什么有些現(xiàn)象會(huì)引起我們重視,促使我們立即采取行動(dòng),努力尋求有效對策?為什么另外一些現(xiàn)象,雖然有時(shí)也同樣嚴(yán)重,卻讓人們無動(dòng)于衷,人們的注意力不是集中在尋求積極有效的對策而是某種方便省事的規(guī)避策略呢?

話說回來,由于令人擔(dān)憂的生態(tài)環(huán)境受到破壞的現(xiàn)象太多了,使人有時(shí)確乎難以認(rèn)識(shí)其實(shí)質(zhì)意義和影響。在對這些威脅生態(tài)環(huán)境的現(xiàn)象進(jìn)行考察分析之前,下面的做法也許是有益的:對這些現(xiàn)象進(jìn)行分級(jí)歸類,從而使我們的思想感情條理化,以便根據(jù)實(shí)際情況采取相應(yīng)的合理的對策。

有一套行之有效的分級(jí)歸類方法源自于軍隊(duì)。他們經(jīng)常將沖突根據(jù)其發(fā)生范圍的大小分為三級(jí),即"局部性沖突","地區(qū)性戰(zhàn)斗",及"戰(zhàn)略性對抗"。第三級(jí)指的是直接威脅到一個(gè)國家的生存,因而必須以全球局勢為背景來進(jìn)行認(rèn)識(shí)的軍事對抗行為。

對生態(tài)環(huán)境方面的危機(jī)也可以這樣來加以考慮。比如,水域的污染、空氣的污染和非法傾倒垃圾的行為多半屬于局部性的問題,而諸如酸雨、地下含水層的污染以及大面積的石油泄漏一類的問題則基本上是地區(qū)性的。這兩類問題都帶有普遍性,世界各地可能同時(shí)出現(xiàn)性質(zhì)相同的局部性問題和地區(qū)性問題,因此,這些局部性問題和地區(qū)性問題又似乎可以看作是全球性的問題。但它們并不屬于戰(zhàn)略性問題,因?yàn)檫@些問題并沒有對全球生態(tài)環(huán)境的本質(zhì)結(jié)構(gòu)造成影響,也沒有直接威脅到人類社會(huì)的生存。

然而,新的一類環(huán)境問題確實(shí)影響全球生態(tài)系統(tǒng),而這些威脅基本上是戰(zhàn)略性的。過去四十年中大氣層氯的含量增加了百分之六百,這不僅發(fā)生在那些生產(chǎn)與此直接相關(guān)的氟里昂的國家,而且發(fā)生在所有國家的上空,還同樣發(fā)生在南極上空、北極上空和太平洋上空--從地球表面一直到天空深處。氯含量的增加破壞了地球調(diào)節(jié)太陽通過大氣層射到地面的紫外線輻射量的全球程序。如果我們讓氯含量繼續(xù)增加,那么紫外線輻射量也將增加--終有一天會(huì)威脅到所有的動(dòng)植物的生存。

地球氣候轉(zhuǎn)暖也是一種戰(zhàn)略性威脅。自第二次世界大戰(zhàn)以來,大氣層中二氧化碳和其他一些吸熱物質(zhì)分子的含量已增加了近百分之二十五,這便對地球自身具有的調(diào)節(jié)太陽熱量在大氣層中存留量的能力構(gòu)成了世界性的威脅。由此導(dǎo)致的大氣層中熱量的增高會(huì)嚴(yán)重破壞地球的氣候平衡機(jī)制,從而影響到地球上的風(fēng)量、雨量、地面溫度、洋流和海面高度,而正是這些因素反過來又決定著陸地和海上動(dòng)植物的生態(tài)分布,也在很大程度上決定著人類社會(huì)的定居地點(diǎn)和生活方式。

換句話說,由于人類社會(huì)已突然具備了改變整個(gè)地球而不只是某一特定地區(qū)的生態(tài)環(huán)境的能力,人類與地球之間的關(guān)系便整個(gè)地發(fā)生了改變。眾所周知,人類文明對地球上的環(huán)境一貫有著極大的影響。且舉一例來說明吧:還在遠(yuǎn)古時(shí)代,人類為了覓食求生,有時(shí)便縱火焚毀大片原始森林,這是有據(jù)可考的。而在今天我們這個(gè)時(shí)代,人類已經(jīng)把地球表面的很大一部分完全改換了面貌,城鎮(zhèn)里的地面換成了混凝土,鄉(xiāng)村里的地面則改造成了精心培育的稻田、牧場、麥田和其他農(nóng)作物種植地。人類加于地球上的這類改變,有時(shí)雖然似乎有著深遠(yuǎn)的影響,但它們對全球生態(tài)系統(tǒng)直到最近仍只產(chǎn)生著微不足道的影響。在我們這個(gè)時(shí)代以前,的確可以高枕無憂地認(rèn)為,無論是人類所曾做過的或是所能做的任何事情,都不可能對地球上的環(huán)境產(chǎn)生永久性的影響。但是今天,我們卻必須拋棄這種想當(dāng)然的想法,這樣才能夠以戰(zhàn)略性眼光來考慮并重新認(rèn)識(shí)我們?nèi)祟愅厍颦h(huán)境之間的關(guān)系。

今天,人類文明已成了地球生態(tài)環(huán)境變化的主要原因。然而,我們卻拒不承認(rèn)這一事實(shí),并且覺得很難想象,人類對地球的影響,現(xiàn)在也得用測量月球?qū)K奈虮╋L(fēng)對高山的侵蝕作用的方法來測量。假如我們現(xiàn)在已有能力改變像太陽與地球之間的關(guān)系這樣重要事物的話,我們自然應(yīng)該承認(rèn)自己有責(zé)任謹(jǐn)慎而有節(jié)制地使用這種權(quán)力。但迄今為止,我們似乎對地球上十分脆弱的生態(tài)系統(tǒng)漠然置之。

本世紀(jì)中有兩個(gè)決定人類與地球之間的本質(zhì)關(guān)系的關(guān)鍵因素發(fā)生了重大變化:一是人口的急劇增長,二是科學(xué)技術(shù)的突飛猛進(jìn)。世界人口每十年的增長數(shù)字就相當(dāng)于全中國的人口總數(shù),而科技的發(fā)展使我們具有了幾乎是不可思議的力量,可以對構(gòu)成這個(gè)地球的物質(zhì)恣意地進(jìn)行焚燒、砍伐、挖掘、搬運(yùn)和改造。

人口的增長既是人類與地球之間的關(guān)系發(fā)生變化的一個(gè)原因,同時(shí)也是向人們昭示這一變化有多么巨大的一個(gè)顯著標(biāo)志,在我們從歷史的角度來看待這一問題的時(shí)候尤其如此。自二十萬年前現(xiàn)代人類開始出現(xiàn)時(shí)起直到朱利葉斯o凱撒的時(shí)代,在地球上生活過的人類總計(jì)不足二億五千萬。一千五百年后,當(dāng)克里斯托弗o哥倫布揚(yáng)帆渡海去尋找新大陸時(shí),地球上的人口大約是五億。到托馬斯o杰佛遜起草《獨(dú)立宣言》的一七七六年,地球上的人口便又翻了一番,達(dá)到十億。到本世紀(jì)中葉,第二次世界大戰(zhàn)結(jié)束之時(shí),地球上的人口總數(shù)剛過二十億。

換句話說,自人類最初出現(xiàn)時(shí)起到一九四五年,經(jīng)歷了一萬多代人的時(shí)間才使世界人口達(dá)到二十億。而如今,在一個(gè)人--我--的一生的時(shí)間里,世界人口便能從二十億增長到九十億。目前,這個(gè)增長過程業(yè)已完成一大半。

像人口增長的情形一樣,科學(xué)技術(shù)的發(fā)展在十八世紀(jì)慢慢開始加速,而現(xiàn)在的發(fā)展速度則以代數(shù)指數(shù)的速度遞增。舉例來說,在科學(xué)的許多領(lǐng)域中現(xiàn)在都有這樣一個(gè)公認(rèn)的說法:最近十年中產(chǎn)生的重大科學(xué)新發(fā)現(xiàn)超過以往科學(xué)史上的新發(fā)現(xiàn)的總和。盡管任何一項(xiàng)新發(fā)現(xiàn)對人類與地球之間的關(guān)系所造成的影響都無法同核武器對人類與戰(zhàn)爭的關(guān)系所造成的影響相比,但這些科學(xué)發(fā)現(xiàn)結(jié)合在一起,卻是千真萬確地使人類所積累的開發(fā)利用地球資源以求生存的能力發(fā)生了根本性的變化--在這樣的條件下,如果人類不加節(jié)制地隨意開發(fā)利用地球資源,其后果就會(huì)同隨意發(fā)動(dòng)核戰(zhàn)爭一樣不堪設(shè)想。

既然人類與地球之間的關(guān)系發(fā)生了這樣根本性的變化,我們就有必要考察分析這一變化并認(rèn)清其實(shí)質(zhì)意義。我們首先需要認(rèn)識(shí)的是,目前正在世界各地不斷發(fā)生的破壞生態(tài)環(huán)境的各種令人怵目驚心的事例,除了對我們產(chǎn)生震撼和警醒作用外,它們之間還有許多共同的特點(diǎn)。它們標(biāo)志著一個(gè)在影響范圍和嚴(yán)重性方面都是人類前所未遇的大問題的存在。地球氣候的轉(zhuǎn)暖、臭氧層的破壞、物種的消亡、森林的毀壞--這些現(xiàn)象有一個(gè)共同的原因:人類文明與地球生態(tài)平衡的關(guān)系的變化。

我們的認(rèn)識(shí)任務(wù)包含兩個(gè)方面:一是要認(rèn)識(shí)到人類對地球進(jìn)行破壞的能力具有全球性的、甚至是永久性的影響;二是要認(rèn)識(shí)到,理解人類作為大自然的創(chuàng)造者之一的新角色的唯一方法,是將自己視為一套不按我們所熟悉的因果定律運(yùn)作的復(fù)雜體系的一個(gè)組成部分。我們所要解決的不是人類對環(huán)境如何產(chǎn)生影響的問題,而是人類如何處理同環(huán)境關(guān)系的問題。因此,要尋求解決問題的辦法,就必須仔細(xì)研究、認(rèn)真評(píng)估這種關(guān)系的重要性,也要認(rèn)真分析評(píng)估人類文明中各種要素之間以及這些要素與地球生態(tài)系統(tǒng)的各個(gè)主要組成部分之間的相互關(guān)系的重要性。

對我們的思維方式提出這種挑戰(zhàn)性要求的先例只有一個(gè),而這一先例又是來自軍事方面的。核武器的發(fā)明及其后美國和蘇聯(lián)研制出成千上萬的戰(zhàn)略性核武器這一現(xiàn)實(shí),迫使人們痛苦地、逐漸地認(rèn)識(shí)到,由發(fā)展核武器而獲取的新能量不僅永遠(yuǎn)改變了兩個(gè)超級(jí)大國之間的關(guān)系而且也永遠(yuǎn)地改變了人類與戰(zhàn)爭慣例之間的關(guān)系。擁有核武器的國家之間如果爆發(fā)全面大戰(zhàn),其結(jié)果可能是雙方同時(shí)而徹底的毀滅。這一認(rèn)識(shí)使人們頭腦清醒起來,開始認(rèn)真地對這樣一種戰(zhàn)爭的前景下雙方關(guān)系的各個(gè)方面重新進(jìn)行認(rèn)識(shí)。早在一九四六年就有一位軍事戰(zhàn)略家下過斷言,認(rèn)為使用核彈進(jìn)行的戰(zhàn)略轟炸"完全有可能撕開長期掩蓋著戰(zhàn)爭性質(zhì)變化的那一層薄紗,現(xiàn)實(shí)是戰(zhàn)爭已由拼斗廝殺發(fā)展成為徹底的毀滅"。

然而,在核軍備競賽的初期,兩個(gè)超級(jí)大國都一廂情愿地認(rèn)為他們擴(kuò)充軍備的行動(dòng)會(huì)對對方的思維產(chǎn)生完全直接的影響。幾十年來,雙方在研制新武器方面的每一點(diǎn)進(jìn)展都是為了用來威脅對方,但每次這樣做的結(jié)果卻只是促使對方加倍努力地研制配備更先進(jìn)的武器。慢慢地,人們終于看清了:造成核軍備競賽問題的主要因素并不是科技。核軍備競賽問題因科學(xué)技術(shù)的發(fā)展而變得復(fù)雜了,這倒沒錯(cuò),但其起因卻在于兩個(gè)超級(jí)大國之間互相對峙的關(guān)系,而其根源則在于人們對戰(zhàn)爭究竟意味著什么這一問題的陳舊的認(rèn)識(shí)。

解決軍備競賽問題的最終辦法也許能夠找到,但不能從競賽雙方中任何一方研制出某種終極武器的行動(dòng)中去尋找,也不能從任何一方單方面裁軍的決定中去尋找,而只能從雙方重新認(rèn)識(shí)并調(diào)整彼此間的關(guān)系的行動(dòng)中去尋找。要完成這種關(guān)系的調(diào)整,必須使武器制造技術(shù)發(fā)生變化,并對兇悍好斗國家封鎖核技術(shù),但更為重要的還是要使我們自己對于戰(zhàn)爭和國與國之間的關(guān)系等問題發(fā)生思想認(rèn)識(shí)上的變化。

當(dāng)前人類文明對全球環(huán)境的威脅的戰(zhàn)略實(shí)質(zhì)以及全球環(huán)境的變化對人類文明的威脅的戰(zhàn)略實(shí)質(zhì)向我們提出了一系列相似的挑戰(zhàn),同時(shí)也使我們產(chǎn)生了一些自欺欺人的期望。有的人認(rèn)為,有了某種嶄新的終極技術(shù)--不管是核能還是基因工程--就可以解決這個(gè)問題。還有的人則認(rèn)為,只有大大減少我們對技術(shù)的依賴才能改善人類的生存環(huán)境--這種看法充其量是一種簡單化的看法。真正的解決辦法要從重新設(shè)計(jì)以及最終彌合文明與地球間的關(guān)系中去尋找。要完成這一點(diǎn),只有通過重新仔細(xì)估量導(dǎo)致這種關(guān)系在較近時(shí)期內(nèi)發(fā)生的劇烈變化的所有各種因素才行。改變我們與地球的關(guān)系的途徑當(dāng)然會(huì)涉及到新技術(shù)的發(fā)明和應(yīng)用,但關(guān)鍵的變化將與對這種關(guān)系本身的新的思路有關(guān)。

詞匯(Vocabulary)

lap ( v.) :(of waves,etc.)move or strike gently with a light,splashing sound such as a dog makes in lapping(波浪)拍打;潑濺

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divert ( v.) :turn(a person or thing)aside(from a course,direction,etc.);deflect轉(zhuǎn)移;使(人或物)轉(zhuǎn)向;岔開,使偏斜

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Antarctic ( adj. ) :of or near the South Pole or the region around it南極的;近南極的;南極區(qū)的;南極地帶的;南極周圍的

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Trans-Antarctic (adj.) : crossing or spanning the Antarctic橫貫?zāi)蠘O的;橫貫?zāi)蠘O地帶的

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parka ( n.) :a hip-length pullover fur garment with a hood,worn 1n arctic regions風(fēng)雪大衣,派克大衣

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glacier ( n.) :a slowly moving river or mass of ice and snow that forms in areas where the rate of snowfall constantly exceeds the rate at which the snow melts冰河;冰川

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accessible ( adj.) : that can be approached or entered;easy to approach or enter能夠接近的;能夠進(jìn)去的;易接近的;易進(jìn)去的

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trap ( v.) :catch in or as in a trap;entrap誘捕;計(jì)捉

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inexorable ( adj.) :that cannot be altered,checked,etc.不可變的;不可抗拒的;無情的

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graph ( n.) :a diagram consisting of nodes and links and representing logical relationships or sequences of events(曲線)圖,標(biāo)繪圖;圖表;圖形

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slab ( n.) :a piece that is flat,broad,and fairly thick平板;厚片

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frigid ( adj.) :extremely cold;without heat or warmth極冷的,寒冷的,嚴(yán)寒的

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snowmobile ( n.) :any of various motor vehicles for traveling over snow,usually with steerable runners at the front and tractor treads at the rear(機(jī)動(dòng))雪車;(履帶式)雪上汽車

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rendezvous ( n.) :[Fr.]a place designated for meeting or assembling[法語]指定集合地;會(huì)合點(diǎn)

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hover ( v.) :stay suspended or flutter in the air near oneplace盤旋

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eerie,eery ( adj. ) :mysterious,uncanny,or weird,esp. in such a way as to frighten or make uneasy神秘的,離奇的,怪異的;陰森的,恐怖的,可怕的/eerily adv.

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hummock ( n.) :ridge or rise in an ice field冰群;(冰原上的)冰丘

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collide ( v.) :come into violent contact;strike violently against each other;crash碰撞;猛撞;互撞

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scenario ( n.) :a sequence 0f events esp. when imagined;an account or synopsis of a projected course of action or events(設(shè)想中的)未來事態(tài);方案

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controversial ( adj. ) :of,subject to,or stirring up controversy;disbatable爭論的;引起爭論的;

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tundra ( n.) :any of the vast,nearly level,treeless plains of the arctic regions凍原;苔原;凍土帶

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equator ( n.) :an imaginary circle around the earth,equally distant at all points from both the North Pole and the South Pole,dividing the earth's surface into the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere赤道

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billow ( v.) :surge,swell,or rise like or in a billow(巨浪)奔騰;(波濤)洶

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pasture ( n.) :

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( n.) :.ground suitable for grazing牧場

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slash (v.) :cut or wound with a sweeping stroke or strokes,as of a knife(用刀等)猛砍,亂砍

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blot (v.) :make blots on;spot;stain;blur(esp. used in blot out:darken or hide entirely;obscure)涂污;玷污;把……弄模糊;遮暗(尤用于bolt out:把……弄模糊;遮暗,遮蔽;掩蔽)

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noctilucent (adj.) :designating or of a luminous cloud of unknown composition。visible at night in the polar regions at an altitude of c.50 miles夜光云的;夜間發(fā)光的

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shimmer ( v.) :shine with an unsteady light;glimmer閃爍;發(fā)出微光

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translucent ( adj.) :1etting light pass but diffusing it so that objects on the other side cannot be clearly distinguished;partially transparent,as frosted glass半透明的

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buildup ( n.) :a gradual increase in amount,power,influence,etc.;expansion(在數(shù)目、力量、影響等方面)逐漸增加,擴(kuò)大,擴(kuò)充;集結(jié)

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methane ( n.) :a colorless,odorless,inflammable gaseous hydrocarbon,CH4,present in natural gas and formed by the decomposition of vegetable matter,as in marshes and mines. or produced artificially by heating carbon monoxide and hydrogen over a nickle catalyst甲烷;沼氣

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landfill ( n.) :the disposal of garbage or rubbish by burying it under a shallow layer of ground埋入地下的垃圾

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paddy ( n.) :rice in the husk,growing or gathered稻,谷

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termite ( n.) :a kind of insect found chiefly in tropical areas,very destructive to wood,textiles,etc.,which makes large hills of hard earth白蟻

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biomass ( n.) :the total mass or amount of living organisms in a particular area or volume生物量

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extinction ( n.) :the fact or state of being or becoming extinct;dying out,as of a race,species of animal,etc.(動(dòng)物的)滅絕,絕種

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rip (v.) :cut or tear apart roughly or vigorously撕,扯

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spectral ( adj.) : of or like a specter;phantom;ghostly鬼怪(似)的;幽靈(般)的

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skirmish ( n.) :a brief fight or encounter between small groups,usually an incident of a battle小規(guī)模戰(zhàn)斗;前哨戰(zhàn)

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aquifer ( n.) :an underground layer of porous rock,sand,etc.containing water,into which wells can be sunk含水層(能對水井提供重要經(jīng)濟(jì)價(jià)值的水量的地下巖層)

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chlorine ( n.) :a greenish-yellow,poisonous,gaseous chemical element with a disagreeable odor.used as a bleaching agent,in water purification,in various industrial processes,etc.(symbol C1)氯(符號(hào)C1)

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chlorofluorocarbon ( n.) :any of a series of gaseous or low-boiling,inert,nonflammable derivatives of methane or ethane,used as refrigerants and solvents,and as propellants in aerosol products[化]氟利昂

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disrupt ( v.) :disturb or interrupt the orderly course of擾亂;破壞

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ultraviolet ( adj. ) :1ying just beyond the violet end of the visible spectrum and having wavelengths shorter than approximately 4 000 angstroms紫外(線)的

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molecule ( n.) :the smallest particle of an element or compound that can exist in the free state and still retain the characteristics of the element or compound[化]分子

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equilibrium ( n.) :a state of balance or equality between opposing forces平衡(狀態(tài));平均;相稱

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exponential ( adj.)[Math.] :of or relating to an exponent:involving a variable or unknown quantity as an exponent[數(shù)]指數(shù)的;冪的

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axiom ( n.) :a statement universally accepted as true;maxim格言,箴言

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cumulative (adj. ) :increasing in effect,size, quantity,etc.by successive additions;accumulated累積的,堆積的;累加的;(作用、大小、數(shù)量等)漸增的

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sustenance ( n.) :one's means of livelihood;maintenance;support生計(jì);支撐;支持,維持

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ozone ( n.) :n unstable,pale-blue gas,O3,with a penetraring odor(an allotropic form of oxygen,formed usually by a silent electrical discharge in air,and used as an oxidizing,deodorizing.and bleaching agent and in the purification of water)[化]臭氧

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depletion ( n.) :the gradual using up or destruction or capital assets,esp. of natural resources資產(chǎn)(尤指自然資源)的折耗,耗減

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deforestation ( n.) :the act or action of clearing (1and)of forests of trees毀林,濫伐森林

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precedent ( n.) :existing practice resulting from earlier precedents先例;前例

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sober ( v.) :make or become self-controlled,calm,serious in thought,etc.(使)變清醒(或冷靜、嚴(yán)肅、莊嚴(yán)等)

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weaponry ( n.) :the design and production o{weapons武器設(shè)計(jì)和生產(chǎn)

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deploy ( v.) :spread out or place in accordance with a plan展開;部署

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leapfrog ( v.) :jump or skip over躍過;越過

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obsolete ( adj.) :no longer in use or practice;discarded;no longer in fashion;out-of-date已廢棄的;已不用的;過時(shí)的;老式的

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simplistic (adj.) :making complex problems unrealistically simple;oversimplifying or oversimplified過分簡單化的

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短語(Expressions)

at stake: to be won or lost;being risked 在勝敗關(guān)頭,冒風(fēng)險(xiǎn)

例:This decision put out lives at stake.這一決定,我們的生命就兇吉難保了。

 

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