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一点儿机井 12/01 美国

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楼主
发表于 2003-12-2 10:37:00 | 只看该作者

一点儿机井 12/01 美国

复习中从CD获益匪浅,感谢各位斑竹的无私劳动.考的不好,题型30-25-55分数24 10-28  25, 阅读语法考杂了.
听力 段对话简单就不说了
     lecture1: 地球大气的那篇,前有机井.先说地球形成时大气的主要成分,然后由于微生物等的左右,氧气渐多.这篇文章好像主要讨论大气碳到了海底岩石中了.注意文章最后,下一步要干什么(ft,我正好一走神.随便选了个下一步讨论光合作用释放氧气也不知对不对,各位要仔细听).
   lecture2: 微生物和squid结合的那篇.前人写的非常详细了
  lecture3: 将一种家具设计的style.开始说存在两种设计的style,一种是P***另一种S****.然后就针对S***猛说.说这种设计注重整体样式,很少注意表面的细节.还有很多特点好像.但是,没听清.最后有一道题,画了一个凳子,说哪个部分不是S**的特点.
长对话很简单
沙发
 楼主| 发表于 2003-12-2 10:45:00 | 只看该作者
有一个问题,我写作文的时候,时间到了我没有来得及按next 和confirm,不知我写的内容会不会丢失?多谢
板凳
发表于 2003-12-2 11:16:00 | 只看该作者
What is your topic of writing?
地板
发表于 2003-12-2 11:19:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用nlzhang在2003-12-2 10:45:00的发言:
有一个问题,我写作文的时候,时间到了我没有来得及按next 和confirm,不知我写的内容会不会丢失?多谢


放心吧,没问题的。 谢谢你的机井!
5#
发表于 2003-12-2 11:19:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用nlzhang在2003-12-2 10:45:00的发言:
有一个问题,我写作文的时候,时间到了我没有来得及按next 和confirm,不知我写的内容会不会丢失?多谢


放心吧,没问题的。 谢谢你的机井!
6#
发表于 2003-12-2 11:24:00 | 只看该作者
Thanks
7#
发表于 2003-12-2 13:11:00 | 只看该作者
Background about the squid
Billions of bacteria live in our intestines, supplying us with essential vitamins and helping us digest food. Recent research suggests that in some animals, and perhaps in humans as well, such bacterial guests may play an even more fundamental role: they may influence the normal development of some internal organs.

Margaret McFall-Ngai, a developmental biologist at the University of Hawaii, studies the partnership between a squid and the luminous bacteria that live inside its light-emitting organ. Unlike our intestines, which have hundreds of species of resident bacteria, the squid’s organ shelters only one type of microbe. By examining this relatively simple symbiosis, McFall-Ngai hopes to gain insight into more complicated interactions.

The symbiosis in question consists of the one-and-a-half-inch- long Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes, and the bacteria Vibrio fischeri. By day the squid lives buried in sand; at night it emerges to forage. Millions of the light-producing bacteria nestle inside the squid, and because the light these bacteria emit matches the wavelength of moonlight and starlight, it disguises the squid from nocturnal predators hunting beneath them. In return, the squid supplies the bacteria with nutrients.

When the squid hatch, they lack the bacteria but soon acquire them from seawater. The squid have two appendages covered with cilia that waft the bacteria through pores into the squid’s light organ, where they multiply rapidly. Just hours after the bacteria enter the squid, cells on the tips and surface of the cilia-covered arms begin to die; within four days the structures have entirely disappeared. Within a few weeks the bacteria induce the formation of a lens and reflector that modifies the emitted light. That the bacteria are responsible for these changes is clear: squid raised in water free of V. fischeri, McFall-Ngai has found, never lose the bacteria-collecting arms, and the light organs don’t fully develop.

Why do the arms die? McFall-Ngai thinks that the bacteria trigger a respiratory burst in the squid cells, creating toxic by-products that trigger cell death in the arms, which are near the bacteria. Strangely, the cells closest to the bacteria appear to be protected from the toxins.

McFall-Ngai also found that the squid bathe the bacteria in a toxic enzyme, perhaps to limit their growth. The enzyme, similar to one found in mammalian immune cells, converts hydrogen peroxide and chloride ions into hypochlorous acid, a basic ingredient of bleach. Most bacteria cannot survive this onslaught.

But V. fischeri can. McFall-Ngai thinks it may produce a protective protein that is very similar to one produced by a close relative. That relative is Vibrio cholerae, the infectious agent of cholera. The protein V. cholerae produces inhibits the respiratory burst with which its host attempts to kill it.

These findings suggest a new way to view the evolution of infectious disease. In the conventional view, harmless relationships between bacteria and their hosts probably evolved as the host learned to live with a microbe that initially caused disease. McFall-Ngai thinks evolution may lead to more complex relationships, with periods of cooperation giving way to an antagonistic relationship in which bacterial guests again become agents of disease. The squid and their bacteria may be an example of a temporary evolutionary détente. Cholera, on the other hand, may exemplify the collapse of an uneasy truce: a once peaceful relationship has reverted to a death struggle.

Even more interesting for McFall-Ngai is the question of the role symbiotic bacteria might play in human development. Given the enormous toll in suffering that bacteria have exacted from us, researchers have naturally tended to focus on bacteria as harmful creatures. Researchers like McFall- Ngai are now looking at the beneficial role these microbes play. We haven’t integrated into our thinking that bacteria are essential, she says, and we need to understand how they are involved in maintaining a healthy human body.
8#
发表于 2003-12-2 21:02:00 | 只看该作者
谢谢nlzhang.
作文应该会自动保存的.
9#
发表于 2003-12-2 23:16:00 | 只看该作者
请问 lecture1: 地球大气的那篇和lecture2: 微生物和squid结合的那篇,机井在那里 ?
10#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-12-3 00:32:00 | 只看该作者
忘了说了essay是关于spend your free time indoors好还是outdoors好
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