性格 personality
正面:
positive 積極的
generous 慷慨的
sweet 貼心的
humorous 幽默的
cheerful 開朗的
friendly 友善的
intelligent 聰明的
carefree 無憂無慮的
負面:
agressive 好鬥的
mean 刻薄的
selfish 自私的
rude 粗魯無禮的
arrogant 傲慢自大的
flaky 瘋瘋癲癲的
careless 粗心的
stubborn 固執的
2011年4月25日 星期一
Death Fog 死亡迷霧
2/2
By Michelle Adams
Two years before the Lake Nyos deaths, thirty-seven people died in a fog next to another lake in the area. An Icelandic scientist discovered a strange layer of CO2 at the bottom of that lake. Most lake water has CO2, but it gets pushed to the surface in safe quantities throughout the year. This lake’s water didn’t move around, though, and the gas built up. The Icelandic scientist believed that something disturbed the CO2 layer and caused a lot of it escape all at once. In high concentrations, CO2 is deadly.
Kling had found his answer. The burns on the people were actually frostbite from the very cold gas. In addition, a landslide had recently pushed rocks into the lake. Kling believes that caused CO2 to rise and flow out of Lake Nyos like a fog.
By looking at a mystery with a scientific eye, the real story can often be revealed. Through research, Kling was able to solve a mystery that seemed almost supernatural. As a result, the government put pipes into the lake suck out the CO2 gas. Other crater lakes in the area are now being watched to make sure the death fog never happens again.
disturb (v.) to interrupt what someone is doingconcentration (n.)a large number or amount of something in the same place landslide (n.)when rocks and soil slide down a mountain or hill mystery (n.)something strange or unknown that cannot be explained or understood reveal (v.)to give someone a piece of information that is surprising or that was previously secret suck (v.)Something which sucks a liquid or an object in a particular direction pulls it with great force
Reference:
Live互動英語雜誌 3月號
Death Fog 死亡迷霧
On August 21, 1986, nearly 2,000 people in a small corner of Cameroon died in one night. Birds fell from the sky, and cattle dropped dead in the fields. The few survivors from the area had strange burns on their skin and described seeing a fog rolling off the lake. What was this death fog, and could it happen again?
Scientists from all over the world assembled in the area to discover what caused this tragedy. By examining the bodies and talking with survivors, many of the scientists jumped to the conclusion that a volcanic eruption was the cause. After all, the whole area is coved with old volcanic craters which now hold lakes. They thought that the volcano under nearby Lake Nyos erupted and pushed super-hot, deadly gas into the surrounding villages.
One scientist, George Kling, was not convinced. He pointed out that the lake, with a smooth bottom and cold water, showed no sign of recent volcanic activity. In addition, this situation was eerily familiar. He remembered that a similar incident happened two years earlier and only ninety-seven kilometers away. Were the Lake Nyos villagers victims of the same killer?
To be continued......
assemble (v.)
surround (v.)to be everywhere around something
(surrounding (adj.))
convince (v.)to persuade someone or make them certain
Reference:
Live互動英語雜誌 3月號
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