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Reading Practice

Reading Practice Test 2

READING PASSAGE 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading
Passage One.

WEATHERING IN THE DESERT


A

In the deserts, as elsewhere, rocks at the earth's surface are changed by weathering,
which may be defined as the disintegration of rocks where they lie. Weathering processes
are either chemical, when alteration of some of the constituent particles is involved; or
mechanical, when there is merely the physical breaking apart and fragmentation of rocks.
Which process will dominate depends primarily on the mineralogy and texture of the rock
and the local climate, but several individual processes usually work together to
the common end of rock disintegration.

The great daily changes in temperature of deserts have long been supposed to be
responsible for the disintegration of rocks, either by the differential heating of the various
rock-forming minerals or by differential heating between the outer and inner parts of rock
masses. However, both field observations and laboratory experiments have led to
a reassessment of the importance of ’ exposure to the sun's rays in desert weathering.
Almost half a century ago Barton remarked that the buried parts of some of the ancient
monuments in Egypt were more weathered than were those parts fully exposed to the
sun's rays, and attributed this to the effects of water absorption below the ground
surface. Laboratory experiments have shown that rocks subjected to many cycles of large
temperature oscillations (larger than those experienced in nature) display no evidence of
fissuring or fragmentation, as a result. However, when marked fluctuations of temperature
occur in moist conditions small rock fragments quickly form.

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The expansive action of crystallising salts is often alleged to exert sufficient force to
disintegrate rocks. Few would dispute that this mechanism is capable of disrupting fissile
or well-cleaved rocks or rocks already weakened by other weathering agencies; wood
is splintered, terracotta tiles disintegrated and clays disturbed by the mechanism, but its
importance when acting upon fresh and cohesive crystalline rocks remains uncertain.

Weathering achieves more than the disintegration of rocks, though this is its most
important geomorphic effect. It causes specific landforms to develop. Many boulders
possess a superficial hard layer of iron oxide and/or silica, substances which have
migrated in solution from the inside of the block towards the surface. Not only is
the exterior thus case-hardened but the depleted interior disintegrates easily. When
weathering penetrates the shell the inside is rapidly attacked and only the hard outer layer
remains to give hollowed or 'tortoiseshell' rocks.

Another superficial layer, the precise nature of which is little understood, is the well-known
desert varnish or patina, a shiny coat on the surface of rocks and pebbles and
characteristic of arid environments. Some varnishes are colourless, others light brown,
yet others so dark a brown as to be virtually black. It's origin is unknown but is significant,
for it has been suggested that the varnish grows darker with the passage of time;
obviously before such a criterion could be used with confidence as a chronological tool
its origin must be known with precision. Its formation is so slow that in Egypt, for example,
it has been estimated that a light brown coating requires between 2,000 and 5,000 years
to develop, a fully formed blackish veneer between 20,000 and 50,000 years.

The development of relatively impermeable soil horizons that are subsequently exposed at
the surface because of erosion of once overlying, easily eroded materials, and which thus
become surface crusts, is widespread in arid regions, although it is also known outside the
deserts, and indeed many of the examples in arid lands probably originated in former
periods of humid climate. The crusts prevent the waters of occasional torrential downpours
from penetrating deeply into the soil, and thus they contribute to the rapid run-
off associated with desert storms. Also, after erosion has cut through the crust and
exposed underlying soil layers, the hard layer forms a resistant capping (duricrust) on
plateaux and mesas, such as are common in many parts of arid and semi-arid Australia.

Some duricrust layers have been used as time markers for landforms and geological
formations. The necessary conditions for this are that the crust forms fairly rapidly, and
that it is sufficiently distinct in appearance to preclude the possibility of confusion with
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other crusts formed at other times. The Barrilaco calcrete of Mexico for instance is
believed to date from about 7,000 B.C. The main silcrete of the northern districts of South
Australia is believed to date from the Lower Miocene, the laterite of northern Australia to
be of the Lower or Middle Miocene age.

Questions 1-7
Reading Passage 1 has seven sections, A-G.

Which paragraph contains the following information?

Write the appropriate letter, A-G, in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.

1 the idea that crystalline salts may not disintegrate solid rock as
easily as other substances

2 the fact that daily temperature changes cause rocks to weather


may not be as important as supposed

3 the regions where weathering creates a thick layer of earth that


water cannot penetrate easily

4 the fact that weathering not only breaks down rocks, but also
shapes the landscape

5 the idea of using impenetrable layers of earth to measure


chronology

6 the two different kinds of weathering in rocks

7 the possibility of using the colour of the shiny surface on rocks to


measure chronology

Questions 8-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

In boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet, write

TRUE if the statement is true

FALSE if the statement is false

NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage

8 Desert rocks can become weathered when there is a chemical


reaction within the rock.
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9 The parts of Egyptian monuments exposed to sunlight were
found to be affected by the weather more than those below the ground.

10
Granite which has been subjected to huge temperature swings
tends not to exhibit any signs of disintegration as a result.

11
It is estimated that dark patina originated between 2,000 and
5,000 years ago.

12
Because of surface crusts, water from torrential rains cannot
be fully absorbed into the ground and as a result causes run offs in arid regions.

13
Duricrust layering is no longer used as an indicator of time
because of the confusion with similar crusts.

Reading Passage 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading
Passage Two.

FASHION AND SOCIETY: A HISTORICAL


PERSPECTIVE
In all societies the body is 'dressed', and everywhere dress and adornment play symbolic
and aesthetic roles. The colour of clothing often has special meaning: a white wedding
dress symbolising purity; or black clothing indicating remembrance for a dead
relative. Uniforms symbolise association with a particular profession. For many centuries
purple, the colour representing royalty, was to be worn by no one else. And of course,
dress has always been used to emphasise the wearer's beauty, although beauty has
taken many different forms in different societies. In the 16th century in Europe, for
example, Flemish painters celebrated women with bony shoulders, protruding stomachs
and long faces, while women shaved or plucked their hairlines to obtain the fashionable
egg-domed forehead. These traits are considered ugly by today's fashion.

The earliest forms of 'clothing' seem to have been adornments such as body painting,
ornaments, scarifications (scarring), tattooing, masks and often constricting neck and waist

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bands. Many of these deformed, reformed or otherwise modified the body. The bodies
of men and of children, not just those of women, were altered: there seems to be a
widespread human desire to transcend the body's limitations, to make it what it is, by
nature, not.

Dress in general seems then to fulfil a number of social functions. This is true of modern
as of ancient dress. What is added to dress as we ourselves know it in the west is fashion,
of which the key feature is rapid and continual changing of styles. The growth of the
European city in the 14th century saw the birth of fashion. Previously, loose robes had
been worn by both sexes, and styles were simple and unchanging. Dress distinguished
rich from poor, rulers from ruled, only in that working people wore more wool and no silk,
rougher materials and less ornamentation than their masters.

However, by the 14th century, with the expansion in trade, the growth of city life, and the
increasing sophistication of the royal and aristocratic courts, rapidly changing styles
appeared in western Europe. These were associated with developments in tailored and
fitted clothing; once clothing became fitted, it was possible to change the styling of
garments almost endlessly. By the 15th and 16th centuries it began to seem shameful to
wear outdated clothing. So those who could afford to do so began discarding
unfashionable clothing simply because it was not in style. Cloth, which was enormously
expensive, was literally, and symbolised, wealth in medieval society.

In modern western societies there is no form of clothing which has not felt the impact of
fashion: fashion sets the terms of all dress behaviour. Even uniforms have been designed
by some of the top fashion houses; even the dress code in the workplace has shifted from
formal, business attire to the more relaxed, smart casual look; even the less affluent enjoy
haute couture - they wear cheaper versions of the top designs and top labels.

Even the unfashionable wear clothes that represent a reaction against what is in fashion.
To be unfashionable is not to ignore fashion; it is rather to protest against the social values
of the fashionable. Last century the hippies of the 1960s created a unique appearance out
of an assortment of secondhand clothes, craft work and army surplus, as a protest against
the wastefulness of the consumer society. They rejected the way mass production
ignored individuality, and also the wastefulness of luxury.

Looked at in historical perspective, the styles of fashion display a mad relativism. At one
time the rich wear cloth of gold embroidered with pearls, at another beige cashmere and
grey suiting. In one epoch men parade in elaborately curled hair, high heels and rouge, at
another to do so is to court outcast status and physical abuse. It is in some sense
inherently ironic that a new fashion starts from rejection of the old and often an eager
embracing of what was previously considered ugly. A case in point is the outlandish,
fashion statement made by the non-conforming, rebellious youth of today who have
tattoos, metal studs and body piercings. They defied mainstream fashion only to see their

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defiance become the fashion of the day in the broader community. Moreover, having once
defined style in centuries past, these adornments have now come full circle.

Despite its apparent irrationality, fashion cements social solidarity and imposes group
norms. It forces us to recognise that the human body is not only a biological entity, but an
organism in culture. To dress the way that others do is to signal that we share many
of their morals and values. Conversely, deviations in dress are usually considered
shocking and disturbing. In western countries a man wearing a pink suit to a job interview
would not be considered for a position at a bank. He would not be taken seriously.
Likewise, even in these 'liberated' times, a man in a skirt in many western cultures causes
considerable anxiety, hostility or laughter.

However, while fashion in every age is normative, there is still room for clothing to express
individual taste. In any period, within the range of stylish clothing, there is some choice of
colour, fabric and style. This was even more true last century, because in the 20th century,
fashion, without losing its obsession with the new and the different, was mass produced.
Originally, fashion was largely for the rich, but since the industrial period the mass
production of fashionably styled clothes has made possible the use of fashion as a means
of self-enhancement and self-expression for the majority.

Questions 14-19
Complete the table below.

NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the passage for each
answer.

Write your answers in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.

Period Clothing Behaviour Types of Clothing

wearing body painting, tattooing,


earliest times
14 masks

pre-
simple, unchanging styles 16
15

14th century 17 18

15th-16th centuries 19 use of doth

Questions 20-23
Complete each sentence with the appropriate ending, A-J, below.
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Write the appropriate letter, A-J, in boxes 20-23 on your answer sheet.

20
The styling of apparel

21
Wearing outdated clothing

22
The impact of fashion

23
Mass production of fashionable clothing

A allowed the less affluent to buy styled clothes.

B was fell by top designers seeing fake, less expensive designer clothing on the market.

C was made possible with the development of tailored and fitted clothing.

D gave the individual a means of self-expression.

E caused anxiety and hostility in western cultures.

F was made possible with the increase in sophistication of the royal courts.

G was seen as something shameful in earlier times.

H had little effect on nonconforming youth.

I distinguished the rich from the poor in earlier times.

J was felt in the workforce with the change to informal wear.

Questions 24-26
Answer the questions below.

Choose NO MORE THAN ONE WORDS from the passage for each answer.Write
your answers in boxes 24-26 on your answer sheet.

A kind of adornment worn by defiant young people these days besides body
piercings and metal studs

24

What was a symbol of wealth in medieval times?

25

Name ONE group of people who protested against the social values of the
fashionable.

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26

Reading Passage 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading
Passage Three.

MASS PRODUCTION
Car manufacturer Henry Ford s 1908 Model T automobile was his twentieth design over a
five-year period that began with the production of the original Model A in 1903. With his
Model T, Ford finally achieved two objectives. He had a car that was designed for
manufacture, and one that was easily operated and maintained by the owner. These
two achievements laid the groundwork for the revolutionary change in direction for the
entire motor vehicle industry.

The key to mass production wasn’t the moving, or continuous, assembly line. Rather, it
was the complete and consistent interchangeability of parts and the simplicity of attaching
them to each other. These were the manufacturing innovations that made the assembly
line possible. To achieve interchangeability, Ford insisted that the same gauging
system be used for every part all the way through the entire manufacturing process.
Previously, each part had been made to a slightly different gauge, so skilled fitters had to
file each part individually to fit onto the other parts of the car. Ford's insistence on working
to gauge throughout was driven by his realisation of the payoff he would get in the form
of savings on assembly costs. Ford also benefited from recent advances in machine tools
able to work on pre-hardened metals. The warping or distortion that occurred as machined
parts were being hardened had been the bane of previous attempts to standardise parts.
Once the warping problem was solved, Ford was able to develop innovative designs that
reduced the number of parts needed and made these parts easy to attach. For example,
Ford's four-cylinder engine block consisted of a single, complex casting. Competitors cast
each cylinder separately and bolted the four together. Taken together,
interchangeability, simplicity, and ease of attachment gave Ford tremendous
advantages over his competition.

Ford's first efforts to assemble his cars, beginning in 1903, involved setting up assembly
stands on which a whole car was built, often by one fitter. In 1908, on the eve of the
introduction of the Model T, a Ford assembler's average task cycle, that is the amount of

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time he worked before repeating the same operations, totalled 514 minutes, or 8.56 hours.
Each worker would assemble a large part of a car before moving on to the next. For
example, a worker might put all the mechanical parts, such as wheels, springs, motor,
transmission and generator, on the chassis (body), a set of activities that took a whole day
to complete. The assembler/fitters performed the same set of activities over and over at
their stationary assembly stands. They had to get the necessary parts, file them down so
they would fit (Ford hadn't yet achieved perfect interchangeability of parts), then bolt them
in place.

The first step Ford took to make this process more efficient was to deliver the parts to
each workstation. Now the assemblers could

remain at the same spot all day. Later in 1908, when Ford finally achieved perfect part
interchangeability, he decided that the assembler would perform only a single task and
move from vehicle to vehicle around the assembly hall. By August of 1913, just before
the moving assembly line was introduced, the task cycle for the average Ford assembler
had been reduced from 514 to 2.3 minutes. Naturally, this reduction spurred a remarkable
increase in productivity, partly because complete familiarity with a single task meant the
worker could perform it faster, but also because all filing and adjusting of parts had by now
been eliminated. Workers simply popped on parts that fitted every time.

Ford soon recognised the problem with moving the worker from assembly stand to
assembly stand: walking, even if only for a yard or two, took time, and jam-ups frequently
resulted as faster workers overtook the slower workers in front of them. Ford's stroke of
genius in the spring of 1913, at his new Highland Park plant in Detroit, was the
introduction of the moving assembly line, which brought the car past the stationary worker.
This innovation cut cycle time from 2.3 minutes to 1.19 minutes; the difference lay in the
time saved in the worker's standing still rather than walking and in the faster work
pace which the moving line could enforce. The moving assembly sped up production so
dramatically that the savings Ford could realise from reducing the inventory of parts
waiting to be assembled far exceeded this trivial outlay.

Even more striking, Ford's discovery simultaneously reduced the amount of human effort
needed to assemble an automobile. What’s more, the more vehicles Ford produced, the
more the cost per vehicle fell. Even when it was introduced in 1908, Ford's Model T, with
its fully interchangeable parts, cost less than its rivals. By the time Ford reached peak
production volume of 2 million identical vehicles a year in the early 1920s, he had cut the
real cost to the consumer by an additional two-thirds.

To appeal to his target market of average consumers, Ford had also designed
unprecedented ease of operation and maintainability into his car. He assumed that his
buyer would be a farmer with a modest tool kit and the kinds of mechanical skills needed
for fixing farm machinery. So the Model T's owner's manual explained in 64 pages how the

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owner could use simple tools to solve any of the 140 problems likely to occur with the car.

Ford's competitors were as amazed by this designed-in repairability as by the moving


assembly line. This combination of competitive advantages catapulted Ford to the head of
the world's motor industry and virtually eliminated craft-production companies unable to
match its manufacturing economies.

Questions 27-32
Complete the flow chart below.

Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.

IMPROVING PRODUCTIVITY

• Manufacturing innovations gave Ford a huge advantage over the


27

ASSEMBLING THE CAR

• Assembly stands set up

• 28 Performed repeatedly.

MAKING THE PROCESS MORE EFFICIENT

• Parts delivered to 29

• Fitter remained stationary all day.

ACHIEVING PERFECT 30

• Fittercarried out a single task only.

• Assembler moved around the hall from car to car.

• Reduction in the 31 increased productivity.

INTRODUCING THE MOVING ASSEMBLY LINE

• Vehicle moved from one workstation to the next

• Increase in 32 implemented because of the stationary


assembler.

Questions 33-37
According to the passage, classify the following characteristics of mass production
as relating to
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A an advantage

B a disadvantage

C neither an advantage nor a disadvantage

Write the correct letter, A, B or C, in boxes 33-37 on your answer sheet.

33
shaping each part to fit individually with all other parts

34
having a single, complex casting for the four-cylinder engine
block

35
designing 20 Ford automobiles within a five-year period

36
hardening of machined parts for standardisation

37
using identical gauges for each part throughout the production

Questions 38-40
Choose the appropriate letter, A, B, C or D,

Write the appropriate letter in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet.

38

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Which graph best describes the change in task time resulting from workers
performing a single task only?

A  Graph A

B  Graph B

C  Graph C

D  Graph D

39

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Which graph best describes the cost of building a moving assembly line in
comparison to the money saved?

A  Graph A

B  Graph B

C  Graph C

D  Graph D

40
Which graph best describes the relationship between the number of vehicles
produced and the cost of the vehicles?

A  Graph A

B  Graph B

C  Graph C

D  Graph D

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Solution:

1 C 2 B

3 F 4 D

5 G 6 A

7 E 8 TRUE

9 FALSE 10 NOT GIVEN

11 FALSE 12 TRUE

13 NOT GIVEN 14 adornments

15 14th century 16 loose robes

17 rapidly changing styles 18 tailored and fitted/tailored, fitted


clothing

19 discarding unfashionable clothing 20 C

21 G 22 J

23 D 24 tattoos

25 cloth 26 hippies

27 competition 28 (Set of) activities

29 (each) workstation 30 PART INTERCHANGEABILITY

31 task cycle 32 work pace

33 B 34 A

35 C 36 B

37 A 38 C

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39 A 40 C

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