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OFFICIAL52 Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points. Drag your answer choices to the spaces where they belong. To remove an answer choice, click on it. To review the passage, click VIEW TEXT. The Natufians differed from their predecessors in many ways - most significantly, in their move toward agriculture.

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Natufian Culture
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In the archaeological record of the Natufian period, from about 12,500 to 10,200 years ago, in the part of the Middle East known as the Levant - roughly east of the Mediterranean and north of the Arabian Peninsula - we see clear evidence of agricultural origins. The stone tools of the Natufians included many sickle-shaped cutting blades that show a pattern of wear characteristic of cereal harvesting. Also, querns (hand mills) and other stone tools used for processing grain occur in abundance at Natufian sites, and many such tools show signs of long, intensive use. Along with the sickle blades are many grinding stones, primarily mortars and pestles of limestone or basalt. There is also evidence that these heavy grinding stones were transported over long distances, more than 30 kilometers in some cases, and this is not something known to have been done by people of preceding periods. Fishhooks and weights for sinking fishing nets attest to the growing importance of fish in the diet in some areas. Stone vessels indicate an increased need for containers, but there is no evidence of Natufian clay working or pottery. Studies of the teeth of Natufians also strongly suggest that these people specialized in collecting cereals and may have been cultivating them and in the process of domesticating them, but they were also still hunter-foragers who intensively hunted gazelle and deer in more lush areas and wild goats and equids in more arid zones.

The Natufians had a different settlement pattern from that of their predecessors. Some of their base camps were far larger (over 1,000 square meters) than any of those belonging to earlier periods, and they may have lived in some of these camps for half the year or even more. In some of the camps, people made foundations and other architectural elements out of limestone blocks. Trade in shell, obsidian, and other commodities seems to have been on the rise, and anthropologists suspect that the exchange of perishables (such as skins, foodstuffs) and salt was also on the increase. With the growing importance of wild cereals in the diet, salt probably became for the first time a near necessity: people who eat a lot of meat get many essential salts from this diet, but diets based on cereals can be deficient in salts. Salt was probably also important as a food preservative in early villages.

As always, there is more to a major cultural change than simply a shift in economics. The Natufians made (and presumably wore) beads and pendants in many materials, including gemstones and marine shells that had to be imported, and it is possible that this ornamentation actually reflects a growing sense of ethnic identity and perhaps some differences in personal and group status. Cleverly carved figurines of animals, women, and other subjects occur in many sites, and Natufian period cave paintings have been found in Anatolia, Syria, and Iran. More than 400 Natufian burials have been found, most of them simple graves set in house floors. As archaeologist Belfer-Cohen notes, these burials may reflect an ancestor cult and a growing sense of community emotional ties and attachment to a particular place, and toward the end of the Natufian period, people in this area were making a strict separation between living quarters and burial grounds. In contrast with the Pleistocene cultures of the Levant, Natufian culture appears to have experienced considerable social change. 

The question of why the Natufians differed from their predecessors in these and other ways and why they made these first steps toward farming as a way of life remains unclear. There were climate changes, of course, and growing aridity and rising population densities may have forced them to intensify the exploitation of cereals, which in turn might have stimulated the development of sickles and other tools and the permanent communities that make agriculture efficient. But precisely how these factors interacted with others at play is poorly understood.

14.Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points. Drag your answer choices to the spaces where they belong. To remove an answer choice, click on it. To review the passage, click VIEW TEXT. The Natufians differed from their predecessors in many ways - most significantly, in their move toward agriculture.

A.The Natufians used tools to collect and process food, but their lack of containers suggests that they rarely had excess food to store.

B.The increase in salt in the Natufians' diet suggests that meat was becoming harder to find, perhaps because of climate change.

C.The Natufians engaged in trade and lived in large camps in which they sometimes built permanent structures.

D.Natufian culture developed somewhat differently in different regions, in part because of differences in the types and amount of food available from place to place.

E.Although their diet included meat from hunting, extensive evidence suggests that the Natufians consumed a lot of cereals and may even have been cultivating them.

F.Natufian art, personal ornamentation, and burial sites suggest cultural changes involving an increasing sense of ethnic identity and perhaps an ancestor cult.

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正确答案:CEF
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【题目翻译】说明:下面是文章的简要概括的介绍句。通过选择三个答案来完成总结,这三个答案表达了文章中最重要的观点。有些句子不属于摘要,因为它们表达了文章中没有呈现的想法,或者是文章中的次要思想。 纳图菲亚人在许多方面与他们的前任不同——最显著的,在他们走向农业方面。 A:纳图菲亚人使用工具收集和加工食物,但是他们缺乏容器表明他们很少有多余的食物可以储存。 B:纳图菲亚人饮食中盐分的增加表明肉类越来越难找到,也许是因为气候变化。 C:纳图菲亚人从事贸易,住在大难民营里,有时他们在那里建造永久性建筑。 D:纳图菲文化在不同地区的发展略有不同,部分原因是各地食物的种类和数量不同。 E:虽然他们的饮食包括狩猎的肉,但大量的证据表明,纳图菲亚人吃了很多谷物,甚至可能一直在种植谷物。 F:纳图菲亚艺术、个人装饰品和墓地暗示着文化上的变化,包括民族认同感的增强和祖先的崇拜。 【判定题型】:根据问题的提问方式和6选3的作答方式可以确定该题目为概要小结题。 【选项定位及分析】 A选项:纳图夫人用工具来收集和加工食物,但是他们缺少容器这说明他们很少有多余的食物用以储存。对应文章第一段,A选项的前半句话是对的,但是文章并没有说他们缺少容器说明他们没有多余的食物储存,原文只是说“Stone vessels indicate an increased need for containers, but there is no evidence of Natufian clay working or pottery.”说明他们没有用黏土或陶土制造容器。故A选项错误。 B选项:纳图夫人饮食中盐分的增加说明肉类变得更难获得,这可能是由天气变化导致的。“盐分的增加”对应第二段内容,但是第二段末只是说纳图夫人增加了饮食中谷类的比重,所以要补充盐分,没有说肉类更难获得。而“天气的变化”对应最后一段,天气变化是迫使纳图夫人采用农耕生活方式的诱因,而不是导致肉类更难获得的原因。故B选项错误。 C选项:纳图夫人参与贸易,并且生活在很大的营地,在那里他们有时会建造经久的建筑。对应文章第二段内容,故C选项正确。 D选项:纳图夫文化的发展在不同地区是不同的,一部分原因是因为各地食物种类和量的不同。错误,因为全文没有提到该信息。 E选项:虽然纳图夫人的饮食中包含着从打猎中获得的肉类,大量证据显示纳图夫人会吃很多谷物,甚至有可能种植谷物。对应文章第1段末尾和第2段的内容,故E选项正确。 F选项:纳图夫艺术,个人饰物以及墓葬遗址都水命文化变化中所包含的民族认同感,和祖先崇拜。F选项对应文章第三段的内容,是第三段的概括总结,故F选项正确。

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