Passage Four
Questions 16 to 20 are based on the flloning passage.
English people are less genetically diverse today than they were in the days of the Vikings, possibly due to two deadly diseases that swept their country centuries ago, a new study says.
The study compared DNA from ancient and modern Englanders and. Found that the country has a smaller gene pool than it did a thousand years ago.
The findings come in contrast to modern England's reputation as a cultural melting pot, where in many major cities you are as likely to hear Urdu from India or Yoruba from Nigeria being spoken on the streets as English.
Rus Hoelzel, a geneticist from the Britain's University of Durham, and his colleagues obtained DNA samples from the skeletal remains of 48 ancient Britons who lived between A.D.300 and 1000. The researchers studied the DNA, which was passed down from mothers to their children. By comparing the DNA with that of thousands of people from various ethnic backgrounds living in England today, they found that genetic diversity was greater in the ancient population. The team also compared the ancient DNA with samples from people living in continental Europe and the Middle East, and found a similar lack of genetic variety.
One possible explanation for this narrowing of diversity might be two major outbreaks of plague that swept England and much of Europe -- the Black Death (1347 1351) and the Great Plague (1665 66).
The Black Death epidemic is estimated to have killed as much as 50 percent of the population of Europe. Three centuries later, a fifth of the population of London died in the Great Plague. However, these diseases didn't kill randomly, Hoelzel explained. The plague killed some people while others remained resistant, he said.
Eske Willerslev, a specialist in ancient DNA from the University of Copenhagen, said he is surprised by the findings but agrees that the historic epidemics may explain the loss in diversity.
Since. the diseases, it appears that England hasn't been able to make up the loss to the gene pool, despite the high rate of immigration into the country over the past 200 years.
The modem England's reputation as a cultural melting pot (Para. 3) most probably mean s.
(66)
(65)
(67)
(63.The fortunate. people in the world ----the only really fortunate people in the. World in my mind are-----those whose work is also their pleasure.) (64.The class is not a large one,not nearly so large as it is often represented to be; and authors are perhaps one of the most important elements in its composition.) They enjoy in this respect at least a real harmony of life. (65.To my mind. to be able to make your work your pleasure is the one class distinction in the world worth
striving for,)And I do not wonder that others are inclined to envy those happy human beings who find their livelihood in the gay effusions of their fancy, to whom every hour of labour is an hour of enjoyment, to whom repose---- however necessary --- is a tiresome interlude, and even a holiday is most deprivation. (66.Whether a man writes well or ill. Has much to say or little, if he cares about writing at all, he will appreciate the pleasures of composition.)(67.To sit at one's table an a sunny morning, with four clear hours of uninterruptible security, plenty of nice white paper, and a Squeezer pen--- that is true happiness. )The complete absorption of the mind upon an agreeable occupation--- what more is there than to desire? What does it matter what happens outside? The House of Commons may do what it likes, and so may the House of Lords. The heathen may rage furiously in every part of the globe.
(From' The Joys of Writing)
(63)
(64)
According to the passage, where did the researchers obtain the DNA samples for the study?
(60)
What's Eske Willerslev's reaction to the conclusion of the study?
(58)
(57)
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