當前位置:首頁 » 英語閱讀 » 自然災害英語科普閱讀

自然災害英語科普閱讀

發布時間: 2021-02-20 23:22:56

『壹』 英語作文 自然災害

Natural Disasters-自然災害

In the past hundred years, there have heen frequent natural disasters, such as floods, droughts, mud-rock flows, seismic sea waves, earthquakes, windstorms and the stretching of new deserts. The disasters have killed millions upon millions of people, destroyed countless homes, and wiped out numerous pieces of fertile land.

Now more and more people become aware that those disasters have much to do with what we have done to the earth. We have cut down too many trees in the forests,we have badly polluted the environment, we have shocked our own home-planet time and again with tremendously powerful explosions of nuclear bombs. As a result, climates have become abnormal, rainwater rushes down hillsides angrily, and the underground energy goes up to revenge itself on us.

The earth is our only home-planet. It is urgent for us to stop damaging it, and to do our best to protect it and make it a lovely place suitable to live in, for we have nowhere to go and survive except where we are now.

『貳』 求一篇寫自然災害的英語文章!

Natural Disasters

In the past hundred years, there have heen frequent natural disasters, such as floods, droughts, mud-rock flows, seismic sea waves, earthquakes, windstorms and the stretching of new deserts. The disasters have killed millions upon millions of people, destroyed countless homes, and wiped out numerous pieces of fertile land.
Now more and more people become aware that those disasters have much to do with what we have done to the earth. We have cut down too many trees in the forests,we have badly polluted the environment, we have shocked our own home-planet time and again with tremendously powerful explosions of nuclear bombs. As a result, climates have become abnormal, rainwater rushes down hillsides angrily, and the underground energy goes up to revenge itself on us.
The earth is our only home-planet. It is urgent for us to stop damaging it, and to do our best to protect it and make it a lovely place suitable to live in, for we have nowhere to go and survive except where we are now

『叄』 各種自然災害的英文名字

各種自然災害的英文名字如下:

Drought, high temperature, low temperature, cold wave, flood, waterlogging, mountain flood, typhoon, tornado, flame tornado, hail, hail, frost, storm, snowstorm, freezing rain, acid rain。

對應的中文如下:

乾旱、高溫、低溫、寒潮、洪澇、積澇、山洪、台風、龍卷風、火焰龍卷風、冰雹、風雹、霜凍、暴雨、暴雪、凍雨、酸雨、

詳細介紹如下:

1、乾旱:drought

乾旱是指淡水總量少,不足以滿足人的生存和經濟發展的氣候現象,一般是長期的現象。乾旱從古至今都是人類面臨的主要自然災害,即使在科技發達的今天,它造成的災難性後果仍然比比皆是。

2、台風:Typhoon

台風(英語:Typhoon)是赤道以北,日界線以西,亞洲太平洋國家或地區對熱帶氣旋的一個分級。在氣象學上,按世界氣象組織定義,熱帶氣旋中心持續風速達到12級(即64節或以上、每秒32.7米或以上,又或者每小時118公里或以上)稱為颶風(Hurricane)或其他在地近義字。

3、龍卷風:tornado

龍卷風是大氣中最強烈的渦旋的現象,常發生於夏季的雷雨天氣時,尤以下午至傍晚最為多見,影響范圍雖小,但破壞力極大。

4、洪澇:Flood and waterlogging

洪澇, 指因大雨、暴雨或持續降雨使低窪地區淹沒、漬水的現象。雨澇主要危害農作物生長,造成作物減產或絕收,破壞農業生產以及其他產業的正常發展。其影響是綜合的,還會危及人的生命財產安全,影響國家的長治久安等。

5、冰雹:Hail

冰雹(Hail)也叫「雹」,俗稱雹子,「霸子」,有的地區叫「冷子」(如徐州,甘肅等地),夏季或春夏之交最為常見。它是一些小如綠豆、黃豆,大似栗子、雞蛋的冰粒。

『肆』 關於自然災害的英語作文750字

Natural Disasters-⾃然災害

In the past hundred years, there have heen frequent natural disasters, such a s floods, droughts, mud-rock flows, sei smic sea waves, earthquakes, windstor ms and the stretching of new deserts. The disasters have killed millions upon millions of people, destroyed countless homes, and wiped out numerous pieces of fertile land.

Now more and more people become aw are that those disasters have much to do with what we have done to the eart h. We have cut down too many trees in the forests,we have badly polluted the environment, we have shocked our own home-planet time and again with treme ndously powerful explosions of nuclear bombs. As a result, climates have beco me abnormal, rainwater rushes down hi llsides angrily, and the underground ene rgy goes up to revenge itself on us.

The earth is our only home-planet. It is urgent for us to stop damaging it, and to do our best to protect it and make i t a lovely place suitable to live in, for we have nowhere to go and survive exc ept where we are now.

⾃然Disasters-⾃然災害

在過去的年⾥,有的頻繁的⾃然災害,如洪 ⽔、⼲旱、泥⽯流、地震海浪、地震、各 地,狂風拉伸新沙漠。在災害數千萬⼈死 亡,摧毀了⽆數的房屋,摧毀了許多塊肥沃 的⼟地。

現在越來越多的⼈意識到這些災害有多與 我們所做的⼀切都在地上。我們砍伐太多 的樹⽊在森林⾥,我們已經嚴重污染環境, 我們有我們⾃⼰的home-planet震驚了⼀ 次⼜⼀次的爆炸和巨⼤的核彈。作為⼀個 結果,⽓候已經變得異常,⾬⽔⼭坡上沖下 來,⽓憤地和地下能量上升⾄復仇本⾝在 我們⾝上。

『伍』 介紹自然災害的英語短文,初二。一百詞左右。

你好:
給你1篇例文,僅供參考,自己適當修改就可以了:
May 12th is an ordinary day in 2008,it is in this day that earthquake happened in Sichuan province.The earthquake destroyed nearly everything in Wenchuan country Sichuan province. It was terrible.We can't describle the scene what we saw with any words.Thousands of people were injured even died. And thousands of children became such unlucky ones who lost fathers or mothers , they longed to have families to continue their lives .I am sympathetic to their fate ! But I believed that we can fight against the fate and change it .For example ,there many people keeping living without food and water for about 100 hours ring the earthquake!

What an unbelievable thing it is !Their great spirits showed the powerful life vitality of humans!However,they must keep fighting against the death .Many schools were destroyed and there were many students and teachers who left us forever.Sadness,hoplessness and different kinds of danger spreaded out here and there !

But ,fortunately ,love is around us :the Communist party helps us ,the army helps us ,the people all over the world help us .They offer us with money ,goods ,love and so on ! Earthquake could destroy our houses ,but it can not destroy the spirits of us!
With the help of the such a large love ,we will over come the damage of the earthquake and face our beautiful future !

希望對你有幫助!不清楚的請追問!

『陸』 尋找真實的自然災害英語短文

A Tragic Harvest Celebration
On Sunday, August 10, 1924, four miles east of Thurman, Colorado, the Garrett, Yoder, and Kuhns families gathered at Henry Kuhns' ranch after a Mennonite service. Twenty-seven people had just finished a harvest celebration dinner. Just after 1:00 pm, one of the men spotted a tornado to the north, in the direction of an adjoining ranch.

Very much in the Mennonite tradition of assisting people after disasters, Henry Kuhns and eight other men left to see whether help was needed. When they saw that no buildings had been hit, they returned to the ranch to witness the most tragic moment of their lives. What may have been the next member of that tornado family was bearing down from the west, directly at the ranch house. Eighteen women and children inside were apparently unaware of the approach of an intense, 100-yard-wide funnel.

The men drove southward as fast as possible but, as they came to within 200 yards of the front gate, the house "trembled as if a giant unseen fist was shaking it." After a few seconds "the structure was ripped apart and its occupants hurled into the air." Ten of the 18 people died; nine of the 10 were children.

The Newport Family
In a northwestern Kansas wheat field, not far from the Nebraska border, John Newport returned to his field chores after a brief rain shower had passed. The edge of an enormous thunderstorm, laced with brilliant lightning, had passed overhead and it seemed as if the worst of the storm was over.
Life was not easy on the Great Plains of Phillips County, Kansas on May 25, 1932. For some members of the Newport family, life was about to become even harder. A muffled roar in the distance grew sharper and louder. As John began to move toward the house, he realized that the low, indistinct form in the distance was not rain or a patch of fog, but a rotating transparent cloud, beneath a dark mass of cloud extending under the southwest corner of the thunderstorm. An occasional snake-like form would briefly appear within the cloud, and then suddenly vanish. It was coming directly toward the farm.

At his next glance, three or four contorted and transparent columns would briefly circle the center of what looked like a patch of swirling mist. The cloud looked nothing like the thin funnels and ropes that he had seen in the distance every few years. He now ran at full speed for the house, trying with each gasp to shout "Cyclone!" Within the next few seconds, seven people would make life or death decisions about contentd possessions, about family members, and about self preservation. The rotating cloud had changed from transparent mist to solid brown mass at the edge of the newly plowed fields and continued to advance relentlessly on the small cluster of farm buildings.

With the edge of the vortex still to the southwest, the corner of the roof suddenly gave way and the 30-year-old cottonwood trees that surrounded the house began to snap. A powerful jet of air, flowing into the tornado, began ripping at the house and the entire building vibrated as the unearthly roar grew steadily louder. One child grabbed a prized locket from a dresser, another gazed at the barnyard full of panic-stricken animals, another yelled for the dog. The oldest stared in denial at her mother; the youngest just stood and cried.

The mother had but one thought, that everyone head immediately for the small root cellar. The storm cave, g some distance from the house, was now out of reach behind a growing wall of flying debris. The root cellar was the only remaining refuge. The children went first, the mother grabbing each by the arm, and quickening their movement by a half-step. The father braced himself against the kitchen door. The last child was on the steps when the parents finally moved toward the cellar, but the first of the intense whirling columns had reached the house.

In later interviews, none of the children mentioned whether there was, between the parents, a final glance at one another. If there were final words at the top of the stairs, they were not heard above the deafening roar.

Winds in excess of 200 mph created a pressure of 20 tons on the side of the small farm house and the building finally reached its limit of resistance. In an instant, a lifetime of work ..... walls, beams, plaster, furniture, tools, clothes, toys, books, and family treasures were all airborne. Some would fall only a few hundred feet away; smaller bits and pieces would be carried 120 miles. Sheet metal and boards flew across the barnyard at 150 feet per second, impaling anything that was standing. The 12-inch-thick hand-hewn sills, on which the house had sat for forty years, would hit the ground a quarter-mile away and plunge eight feet into the prairie soil. An entire cottonwood tree was found two miles away.

After a few minutes the children emerged from the cellar, not into the kitchen, but out into a rain and hail storm. They located the lifeless body of their mother about 100 yards from the empty foundation. The father, barely alive, was found 200 yards further away, across the state line in Nebraska. His last words were instructions to get to the nearest neighbor for help, a half mile away. He fell into unconsciousness in the arms of his eldest daughter. The children, Mildred, Martha, Eleanor, Dean, and Paul, ages 3-15, ran through a barrage of five-inch-diameter hail. They arrived at the next farm battered, bloodied, with broken arms and ribs. John died a few hours later neighbor's living room. The children began new lives with their grandparents.

Epilogue
In mid-March, we were incredibly surprised to receive an email from a man in Arkansas. Much to our amazement, he is the grandson of John Newport, Martha's son, the next oldest daughter. He lives only a few miles from the Arkadelphia tornado path. He is involved with a Cub Scout troop, and they decided to study tornadoes. They went onto the WWW to see if they could find any information about the subject, and discovered this page. He was flabbergasted to find himself reading about his own family!

Shortly afterware, we were able to speak with Eleanor, and found that she remembered details about the tornado that were not in the story. Eleanor's most vivid memory is of the corner of the house lifting up and the light appearing just above the floor. The children crawled underneath the remnant of a door to seek shelter from the pounding hail. In a state of shock, the next thing she remembered was waking up at the neighbor's home hours later. The daughters were kept pretty much together by other members of the family, and all graated from the local high school before they went their own ways.

We had a very pleasant visit with Eleanor in June, 1997. She, her husband, and their three children farmed wheat and cattle in southern Nebraska, not far from the Kansas border. Now 79, Eleanor is retired, but is very active keeping her lawn and garden neat and blooming. A few of her old photos are below. They are right above the photo of the storm shelter that sits about 20 feet from their home. It was one of the first things Eleanor and her husband built after moving there.

Eleanor in June, 1997

This is all that was left of the Newport family's home, an empty foundation with a washing machine next to it. Eleanor told us that she had no idea of who the people were that were in the photo. Many area residents came by to look at the damage. She said that you can still see tree damage at the site. We intended to go there as well, but 3 inches of rain had fallen the night before, and the road to the home site was a quagmire.

This was other tornado damage at the Newport farm.

The storm cellar at Eleanor's home. The door leads down a set of steps and into a dry, roomy cellar. She stores her home-canned fruits and vegetables there, so it serves double ty.

『柒』 關於 自然災害 的英語小短文不要太長要寫出是什麼災

英語問題回答:版權?Answer:likeflooding,!

『捌』 關於自然災害的英語小短文

Because of natural disaster,over a billion people have to live on $1 a day or less.Families in such difficulty must go without the food they need -- every day of their lives. A billion poor people -- mostly women and children -- are losing their health and lives, and their hope for a better future.
2 million babies a year are so weak from hunger that they die ,Poor families spend over 70% of their income(收入)on food. (An average American family spends just over 10%). 226 million children are lost their chances for a good
ecation and bright future.
But, World Hunger Can Be Defeated.

我寫的是地震之後的影響,這也是關於自然災害的文章啊

『玖』 關於 自然災害 的英語小短文

Because of natural disaster,over a billion people have to live on $1 a day or less.Families in such difficulty must go without the food they need -- every day of their lives. A billion poor people -- mostly women and children -- are losing their health and lives, and their hope for a better future.
2 million babies a year are so weak from hunger that they die ,Poor families spend over 70% of their income(收入)on food. (An average American family spends just over 10%). 226 million children are lost their chances for a good
ecation and bright future.
But, World Hunger Can Be Defeated.

我寫的是地震之後的影響,這也是關於自然災害的文章啊

『拾』 關於自然災害的英語文章

The long-term earthquake prediction And short-term earthquake prediction, the long-term earthquake prediction can be achieved, mainly based on the fault of seismologists and geological structure of the study (Figure 4). The long-term earthquake prediction than the prediction of climate (long-term weather forecast) better, because the earthquake occurred in a certain place with a big geological structure, an 8 earthquake will not happen in the Ordos platform such as the stability of the geological unit . The human fault, and other geological studies have been hundreds of years of history and knowledge to provide the long-term earthquake prediction on the basis of the information. As for the prediction of climate, the wet weather next year, where the flood occurred, it is difficult to judge.這個是關於地震的長期預告的 我還有圖 可不能發圖 http://press.idoican.com.cn/detail/articles/20080527040135/ http://natural-hazard.blogspot.com/2008/05/blog-post_28.html 這倆個網站的不錯 雖然是中文的 找個在線翻譯過來就行了

熱點內容
39天電影在線播放免費觀看 發布:2024-08-19 09:18:18 瀏覽:939
可投屏電影網站 發布:2024-08-19 08:19:20 瀏覽:140
農村喜劇電影在線觀看 發布:2024-08-19 07:46:21 瀏覽:300
電影院默認區域 發布:2024-08-19 07:39:02 瀏覽:873
台灣金燕全部電 發布:2024-08-19 07:30:20 瀏覽:249
在哪可以看網站 發布:2024-08-19 07:29:06 瀏覽:467
電影tv版app 發布:2024-08-19 07:28:17 瀏覽:51
韓國倫理電影在什麼地方看的啊 發布:2024-08-19 07:18:34 瀏覽:835
韓國找女兒那個電影 發布:2024-08-19 07:18:34 瀏覽:667
驚變溫碧霞在線播放 發布:2024-08-19 07:10:13 瀏覽:404