东华理工大学808水文地质学基础2016--2018年考研初试真题
东华理工大学611自然地理学2016--2018年考研初试真题
![东华理工大学611自然地理学2016--2018年考研初试真题](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/ee87b63d79563c1ec5da7176.png)
注意:答案请做在答题纸上,做在试卷上无效
东华理工大学2016年硕士生入学考试初试试题
科目代码: 611 ; 科目名称:《自然地理学》;( A 卷)
适用专业(领域)名称:地理学
一、名词解释:(共6个,每个5分,共30分)
1、大陆岛
2、土壤质地
3、球状风化
4、夷平面
5、西南季风
6、地形雨
二、简答题:(共4小题,每小题15分,共60分)
1、赤潮发生的原因与预防措施?
2、简述喀斯特地貌形成的阶段性?
3、“中国丹霞“是世界自然遗产,简答中国丹霞的6个组成部分及其基本特征?
4、土壤资源丧失和退化的主要途径?
三、论述题:(共3小题,每小题20分,共60分)
1、北半球山地南坡雪线一般高于北坡,但喜马拉雅山却相反,原因何在?
2、寒潮、梅雨、台风的形成及其影响?
3、"南水北调"的中线工程已于2014年底正式通水,请简述它的基本概况与可能造成的环境影响及区域效应?
第 1 页,共 1 页。
东华理工大学803普通地质学2016年考研初试真题
![东华理工大学803普通地质学2016年考研初试真题](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/087c6fd71a37f111f1855b7b.png)
第 1 页,共 1 页
东华理工大学
考研专业课初试真请做在答题纸上,做在试卷上无效
东华理工大学 2016 年硕士生入学考试初试试题
科目代码: 803 ; 科目名称:《普通地质学》;( 正 卷) 适用专业(领域): 070900 地质学、081800 地质资源与地质工程
一、名词解释题:(共 10 小题,每小题 3 分,共 30 分) 1.地垒: 2.岩层产状: 3.侵蚀基准面: 4.平行不整合接触: 5.区域变质作用: 6.岩浆: 7.岩溶(Karst): 8.摩氏硬度计: 9.洋流: 10.层理: 二、问答题:(共 8 小题,每小题 10 分,共 80 分) 1.试述地球动力地质作用的基本类型? 2.顺序写出显生宙的地质年代单位名称及其代号(划分到纪)。 3.碎屑岩中主要有哪几种胶结物?如何区别它们? 4.简述矿物鉴定的主要依据有哪些? 5.阐述影响风化作用的因素有哪些? 6.岩浆岩的七种主要造岩矿物是哪些?什么是暗色矿物和浅色矿物? 7.阐述影 响 变 质 作 用 的 因 素 , 说 明 变 质 作 用 方 式 有 哪 些 ? 8.褶皱在基本要素主要有哪些?并作简要解释。
东华理工大学801人文地理学2016-2018年考研专业课真题试卷
![东华理工大学801人文地理学2016-2018年考研专业课真题试卷](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/df8e142e55270722192ef7c0.png)
注意:答案请做在答题纸上,做在试卷上无效
第 1 页,共 1 页
东华理工大学2018年硕士生入学考试初试试题
科目代码: 801 ; 科目名称:《人文地理学》;( A 卷) 适用专业(领域)名称: 地理学
一、名词解译题:(共10小题,每小题5分,共50分)
1.国家权力;
2.城市地域结构;
3.农业区位论;
4.人文地理学;
5.政治性质;6.文化景观;7.旅游资源;8.人口政策;9.宗教;10.民族
二、问答题:(共4小题,每小题15分,共60分)
1.文化的特点及文化的扩散方式?
2.自然环境对城市的影响有哪些?
3.城市体系及其等级规律是什么?
4.适度人口数量和适度增长率对社会经济发展战略的意义有哪些?
三、论述题:(共1小题,每小题40分,共40分)
1.结合当前国内、国际政治经济形势,试论述“一带一路”战略对促进我国经济持续稳定发展的重要作用和意义。
东华理工大学2018年考研专业课初试真题精都考研()——全国100000考研学子的选择。
东华理工大学2016年全日制硕士研究生招生初试专业目录【模板】
![东华理工大学2016年全日制硕士研究生招生初试专业目录【模板】](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/4adf690f102de2bd970588c8.png)
_ 003岩石成因与成矿作用
_ 004资源环境与经济
_ 005地学信息管理与信息系统
_ 006油气盆地分析与勘查
_ 007深部成矿机理与勘查
_ 008核废物地质处置
陈正乐、刘晓东、郭福生、聂逢君、潘家永、夏菲、李满根、巫建华、胡宝群、张树明、刘成东、姜勇彪、祝民强、张展适、谢财富、林子瑜、彭花明、王正其、吴仁贵、王勇、李建波、郭国林、朱志军、戴朝成、陈留勤、李光来、刘帅、时国、黎广荣、王安东、陶继华、韩善楚、曹秋香
①ห้องสมุดไป่ตู้01思想政治理论
②201英语一
③601高等数学
④810环境学导论
《高等数学》(上、下册)(第六版),同济大学编,高等教育出版社,2007年
《环境学导论》(第三版),何强等编著,清华大学出版社,2004年
3
********水利工程
01水文学及水资源
02地下水科学与工程
孙占学、刘金辉、李金轩、张卫民、高柏、刘亚洁、李寻、陈功新、周义朋、吉植强
《水文地球化学》(第三版),李学礼、孙占学、刘金辉编著,原子能出版社,2010年
《普通地质学》(第三版),舒良树主编,地质出版社,2010年;《地质学基础》(第四版),宋青春等主编,高等教育出版社,2005年
35
01矿物学、岩石学、矿床学
_ 001火成岩石学
_ 002沉积岩石学
_ 003矿床地质学
陈正乐、刘晓东、郭福生、聂逢君、潘家永、夏菲、李满根、巫建华、胡宝群、张树明、刘成东、姜勇彪、祝民强、张展适、谢财富、林子瑜、彭花明、王正其、吴仁贵、王勇、李建波、郭国林、朱志军、戴朝成、陈留勤、李光来、刘帅、时国、黎广荣、王安东、陶继华、韩善楚、曹秋香
(完整版)《水文地质学基础》试题库及参考答案
![(完整版)《水文地质学基础》试题库及参考答案](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/2d4cc12d284ac850ac02421d.png)
第一章地球上的水及其循环一、名词解释:2.地下水:地下水是赋存于地面以下岩石空隙中的水。
3.矿水:含有某些特殊组分,具有某些特殊性质,因而具有一定医疗与保健作用的地下水。
4.自然界的水循环:自大气圈到地幔的地球各个层圈中的水相互联系、相互转化的过程。
5.水文循环:发生于大气水、地表水和地壳岩石空隙中的地下水之间的水循环。
6.地质循环:地球浅层圈和深层圈之间水的相互转化过程。
7.大循环:海洋与大陆之间的水分交换。
8.小循环:海洋或大陆内部的水分交换。
9.绝对湿度:某一地区某一时刻空气中水汽的含量。
10.相对湿度:绝对湿度和饱和水汽含量之比。
11.饱和差:某一温度下,饱和水汽含量与绝对湿度之差。
12.露点:空气中水汽达到饱和时的气温。
13.蒸发:在常温下水由液态变为气态进入大气的过程。
14.降水:当空气中水汽含量达饱和状态时,超过饱和限度的水汽便凝结,以液态或固态形式降落到地面。
14.径流:降落到地表的降水在重力作用下沿地表或地下流动的水流。
15.水系:汇注于某一干流的全部河流的总体构成的一个地表径流系统。
16.水系的流域:一个水系的全部集水区域。
17.分水岭:相邻两个流域之间地形最高点的连线。
18.流量:单位时间内通过河流某一断面的水量。
19.径流总量:某一时间段内,通过河流某一断面的水量。
20.径流模数:单位流域面积上平均产生的流量。
21.径流深度:计算时段内的总径流量均匀分布于测站以上整个流域面积上所得到的平均水层厚度。
22.径流系数:同一时段内流域面积上的径流深度与降水量的比值。
二、填空1.水文地质学是研究地下水的科学。
它研究岩石圈、水圈、大气圈、生物圈及人类活动相互作用下地下水水量和水质的时空变化规律。
2.地下水的功能主要包括:资源、生态环境因子、灾害因子、地质营力、或信息载体。
3.自然界的水循环分为水文循环和地质循环。
4.水文循环分为大循环和小循环。
5.水循环是在太阳辐射和重力作用下,以蒸发、降水和径流等方式周而复始进行的。
东华理工大学2018年硕士生入学考试初试试题
![东华理工大学2018年硕士生入学考试初试试题](https://img.taocdn.com/s3/m/afb53a6752ea551811a68711.png)
东华理工大学2018年硕士生入学考试初试试题科目代码: 840 ; 科目名称:《综合英语》;( A 卷)适用专业(领域)名称:学科教学(英语)Part I Reading Comprehension (50%,2.5*20)In this section there are four passages followed by questions or unfinished statements, each with four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer.Text AThe bag is one of the most simple and useful things in the world. It is a container made of paper or cloth. It has given the world many strange expressions that are not very simple. Some of them are used in the United States today.One is “bagman”. It describes a go-between. The go-between sees to it that money is passed — often illegally — from one person to another. Another widely-used expression is to “let the cat out of the bag”. It is used when someone tells something that was supposed to be secret. No one can explain how the cat got into the bag. But there is an old story about it.Long ago tradesmen sold things in large cloth bags. One day a woman asked for a pig. The tradesman held up a cloth bag with something moving inside it. He said it was a live pig. The woman asked to see it. When the dishonest tradesman opened the bag, out jumped a cat — not a pig. The tradesman’s secret was out. He was trying to trick her. And now everybody knew it.The phrase “to be left holding the bag” is as widely used as the expression “to let the cat out of the bag”. This expression makes the person left holding the bag responsible for an action, often a crime or misdeed. That person is the one who is punished. The others involved in the act escape. Where the expression came from is not clear. Some say that General George Washington used it during the American Revolutionary War. One of Washington’s officers, Royall Taylor, used the expression in a play about Daniel Shay’s rebellion. The play was in 1787, after Taylor helped to put down Shay’s rebellion.Shay led a thousand war veterans in an attack on a federal building in Springfield, Massachusetts. Guns were in the building. Some of the protesters were farmers who had no money to buy seed. Some had been put in prison for not paying their debts. They were menwho fought one war against the king of England, and were now prepared to fight against their own government. Most of the rebels were captured. Shay and some of the officers escaped.In his play, Taylor describes Shay as disappearing, giving others “the bag to hold”.A bag is useful in many ways. Just be careful not “to let the cat out of the bag”, or someone may leave you “holding the bag”.1. According to the passage, a bagman refers to _________________.A) a person who travels around carrying his things in a bag B) a vagrant workerC) a person who delivers or collects money for criminals D) a homeless person2. Which of the following is TRUE concerning the story about “let the cat out of the bag”?A) The tradesman wanted to play a joke with the woman.B) The woman wanted to buy a cat.C) The tradesman kept a cat in a plastic bag.D) The tradesman lied to the woman that he had a live pig in the bag.3. What can we infer from the story “to be left holding the bag”?A) The person left holding the bag was completely innocent.B) The person left holding the bag took no responsibility for committing crimes.C) Many farmers protested against the government because they couldn’t pay their debts.D) Many protesters became the scapegoats for Shay and his officers.4. What does the last sentence of this passage mean?A) A bag has many different functions.B) People should often keep secret or they will be left to take the responsibility for everything.C) People should watch out and learn to take the responsibility for their actions.D) You will have to hold the bag if you let the cat out of it.5. The best title for this passage is ________________.A) Don’t Let the Cat Out of the Bag B) To Be Left Holding a BagC) Words and Their Stories: Bag Expressions D) Bag: A Useful ContainerText BTraditional plant breeding involves crossing varieties of the same species in ways they could cross naturally.For example,disease-resistant varieties of wheat have been crossed with high-yield wheat to combine these properties.This type of natural gene exchange is safe and fairly predictable.Genetic engineering(GE)involves exchanging genes between unrelated species that cannot naturally exchange genes with each other.GE can involve the exchange of genes between vastly different species—e.g. putting scorpion toxin genes into maize or fish antifreeze genes into tomatoes.It is possible that a scorpion toxin gene,even when it is in maize DNA,will still get the organism to produce scorpion toxin, but what other effects may it have in this alien environment?We are already seeing this problem—adding human growth hormone genes to pigs certainly makes them grow—but it also gives them arthritis and makes them cross-eyed,which was entirely unpredictable.It will be obvious,for example,that the gene for human intelligence will not have the same effect if inserted into cabbage DNA as it had in human DNA, but what side-effect would it have?In other words,is GM food safe to eat?The answer is that nobody knows because long-term tests have not been carried out.Companies wanting a GM product approved in the UK or U.S. are required to provide regulatory bodies with results of their own safety tests.Monsanto’s soya beans were apparently fed to fish for ten weeks before being approved.There was no requirement for independent testing,for long-term testing,for testing on humans or testing for specific dangers to children or allergic people.The current position of the UK Government is that “There is no evidence of long-term dangers from GM foods.” In the U.S.,the American Food and Drug Administration (AFDA) is currently being prosecuted for covering up research that suggested possible risks from GM foods.6. Genetic engineering .A) involves crossing varieties of the same speciesB) is safe and fairly predictableC) is dangerous and entirely unpredictableD) covers the exchange of genes between different species7. According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?A) The side-effect of adding human growth hormone to pigs is that pigs may acquire somediseases of human.B) Human intelligence gene functions differently in human DNA and in cabbage DNA.C) In the UK or U.S., a GM product cannot be approved before the results of its safetytests are provided.D) Tests show that GM foods have specific dangers to children or allergic people.8. What can we infer from the last paragraph?A) There is no evidence of long-term dangers from GM foods.B) The UK government and the U.S. government have different attitudes towards GMfoods.C) The AFDA in the U.S. was charged with concealing some research findings.D) The governments of the UK and the U.S. are protecting the GM foods.9. The possible title for the passage might be .A) Safe to Eat? B) GM Food NeedsC) Genetic Engineering D) A New Way of Breeding10. What’s the writer’s attitude towards GM food?A) Neutral. B) Positive. C) Negative. D) Indifferent. Text CFaces, like fingerprints, are unique. Did you ever wonder how it is possible for us to recognize people? Even a skilled writer probably could not describe all the features that make one face different from another. Yet a very young child-or even an animal, such as a pigeon-can learn to recognize faces. We all take this ability for granted.We also tell people apart by how they behave. When we talk about someone’s personality, we mean the ways in which he or she acts, speaks, thinks and feels that make that individual different from others.Like the human face, human personality is very complex. But describing someone’s personality in words is somewhat easier than describing his face. If you were asked to describe what a “nice face” looked like, you probably would have a difficult time doing so.But if you were asked to describe a “nice person,” you might begin to think about someone who was kind, considerate, friendly, warm, and so forth.There are many words to describe how a person thinks, feels and acts. Gordon Allport, an American psychologist, found nearly 18,000 English words characterizing differences in people’s behavior. And many of us use this information as a basis for describing, or typing, his personality. Bookworms, conservatives, military types---- people are described with such terms.People have always tried to “type” each other. Actors in early Greek drama wore masks to show the audience whether they played the villain’s or the hero’s role. In fact, the words “person” and “personality” come from the Latin persona, meaning “mask”. Today, most television and movie actors do not wear masks. But we can easily tell the “good guys” from the “bad guys” because the two types differ in appearance as well as in actions.11. The main idea of this passage is ____________.A) how to distinguish people’s facesB)how to describe people’s personalityC) how to distinguish people both inward and outwardD) how to differ good persons from bad persons12. The author is most probably a _________.A) behaviorist B) psychologist C) sociologist D) scientist13. Which of the following is NOT true?A) Different people may have different personalities.B) People differ from each other in appearance.C) People can learn to recognize faces.D) People can describe all the features of others.14. The reason why it is easier to describe a person’s personality in words than his face is that________.A) a person’s face is more complex than his personalityB) a person’s personality is easily distinguishedC) a person’s personality is very complexD) many words are available when people try to describe one’s personality15. W e learn from the passage that people classify a person into a certain type according to________.A) his way of acting and thinking B) his way of speaking and behavingC) his learning and behavior D)his physical appearance and hispersonalityText DIt is often helpful when thinking about biological processes to consider some apparently similar yet better understood non-biological process. In the case of visual perception an obvious choice would be colour photography. Since in many respects eyes resemble cameras, and percepts photographs, is it not reasonable to assume that perception is a sort of photographic process whereby samples of the external world become spontaneously and accurately reproduced somewhere inside our heads? Unfortunately, the answer must be no. The best that can be said of the photographic analogy is that it points up what perception is not. Beyond this it is superficial and misleading. Four simple experiments should make the matter plain.In the first a person is asked to match a pair of black and white discs, which are rotating at such a speed as to make them appear uniformly grey. One disc is standing in shadow, the other in bright illumination. By adjusting the ratio of black to white in one of the discs the subject tries to make it look the same as the other. The results show him to be remarkably accurate, for it seems he has made the proportion of black to white in the brightly illuminated disc almost identical with that in the disc which stood in shadow. But there is nothing photographic about his perception, for when the matched discs, still spinning, are photographed, the resulting print shows them to be quite dissimilar in appearance. The disc in shadow is obviously very much darker than the other one. What has happened? Both the camera and the person were accurate, but their criteria differed. One might say that the camera recorded things as they look, and the person things as they are. But the situation is manifestly more complex than this, for the person also recorded things as they look. He did better than the camera because he made them look as they really are. He was not misled by the differences in illumination. He showed perceptual constancy. By reason of an extremely rapid, wholly unconscious piece of computation he received a more accurate record of theexternal world than could the camera.In the second experiment a person is asked to match with a colour card the colours of two pictures in dim illumination. One is of a leaf, the other of a donkey. Both are coloured an equal shade of green. In making his match he chooses a much stronger green for the leaf than for the donkey. The leaf evidently looks greener than the donkey. The percipient makes a perceptual world compatible with his own experience. It hardly needs saying that cameras lack this versatility.In the third experiment hungry, thirsty and satiated people are asked to equalize the brightness of pictures depicting food, water and other objects unrelated to hunger or thirst. When the intensities at which they set the pictures are measured it is found that hungry people see pictures relating to food as brighter than the rest (i.e. to equalize the pictures they make the food ones less intense), and thirsty people do likewise with “drink” pictures. For the satiated group no differences are obtained between the different objects. In other words, perception serves to satisfy needs, not to enrich subjective experience. Unlike a photograph the percept is determined by more than just the stimulus.The fourth experiment is of a rather different kind. With ears plugged, their eyes beneath translucent goggles and their bodies either encased in cotton wool, or floating naked in water at body temperature, people are deprived for considerable periods of external stimulation. Contrary to what one might expect, however, such circumstances result not in a lack of perceptual experience but rather a surprising change in what is perceived. The subjects in such an experiment begin to see, feel and hear things which bear no more relationship to the immediate external world than does a dream in someone who is asleep. These people are not asleep yet their hallucinations, or so-called ‘autistic’ perceptions, may be as vivid, if not more so, than any normal percept.16. In the first paragraph, the author suggests that _______.A. colour photography is a biological processB. vision is rather like colour photographyC. vision is a sort of photographic processD. vision and colour photography are very different17. In the first experiment, it is proved that a person _______.A. makes mistakes of perception and is less accurate than a cameraB. can see more clearly than a cameraC. is more sensitive to changes in light than a cameraD. sees colours as they are in spite of changes in the light18. The second experiment shows that ________.A. people see colours according to their ideas of how things should lookB. colours look different in a dim lightC. cameras work less efficiently in a dim lightD. colours are less intense in larger objects19. What does “to equalize the brightness” (Line 1, Para. 4) mean?A. To arrange the pictures so that the equally bright ones are together.B. To change the lighting so that the pictures look equally bright.C. To describe the brightness.D. To move the pictures nearer or further away.20. The group of experiments, taken together, proves that human perception is _______.A. unreliableB. mysterious and unpredictableC. less accurate than a cameraD. related to our knowledge, experience and needsPart II Translation ( 50 Points)Section A :For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to translate a passage from Chinese into English.(30%)1812年春,拿破仑在俄国边境屯兵60万。
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
注意:答案请做在答题纸上,做在试卷上无效
东华理工大学2016年硕士生入学考试初试试题
科目代码:808;科目名称:《水文地质学基础》;(A卷)
适用专业(领域)名称:081500水利工程
一、选择题:(共15小题,每小题2分,共30分)
1地下水的实际流速通常()地下水的渗透流速。
a.大于b.等于 c.小于
2有入渗补给时或蒸发排泄时潜水面可以看做()。
a.流面b.等水头面c.既非a也非b
3当某种岩石由两种大小不等的颗粒组成,且粗大颗粒之间的孔隙完全为细小颗粒所充填时,则此岩石的孔隙度()由粗颗粒和细颗粒单独组成时的岩石的孔隙度的乘积。
a.小于b.大于c.等于
4河流与地下水的补给关系沿着河流纵剖面而有所变化。
一般说来,在山区河谷深切,河流()地下水。
a.补给b.排泄c.既非a也非b
5潜水含水层中的地下水流动时,通常是从()的地方运动。
a.水力梯度大的地方向水力梯度小
b.地形坡度大的地方向地形坡度小
c.地形高的地方向地形低
6包气带岩层的渗透系数随包气带含水量的降低而()。
a.增大b.减小c.不变
7水对某种盐类的溶解能力随该盐类浓度的增加而()。
a.增强b.不变c.减弱
8山区地下水全部以大泉形式集中排泄时,可以认为泉流量()地下水的补给量。
a.小于b.大于c.等于
9接受同等强度的降水补给时,砂砾层的地下水位变幅()细砂层的地下水位变幅。
a.大于b.小于c.等于
10地下水按()分类,可以分为孔隙水、裂隙水和岩溶水。
a.埋藏条件b.含水介质类型c.化学成分的形成
11灰岩地区的峰林平原,是岩溶作用()的产物。
a.早期b.中期c.晚期
12在分水岭地带打井,井中水位随井深加大而()。
a.升高b.不变c.降低
13在设计重大工程的排水设施时,应根据多年水位动态资料,考虑()地下水位
第1页,共3页。