北京合众力源观光农业园区策划书(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

what l ooked li ke an em pty space. Li Yanpi ng sai d, “ That em pty hol e i s l i ke a m outh al ways needi ng to be fed. Those l i ghts are thi ns that are being pul ed i nto tim e by the gravity of the hol e.” We watched with i nterest and am azem ent at the li ghts whi ch seem ed to be goi ng fai nter and fai nter round the edge of the bl ack hol e. Just then the li ghts on our spaceshi p went our the and the puter stopped working. What was happeni ng? I tri ed to turn the spaceshi p away from the hol e but i t woul d not m ove. Woul d i t eat us too? Suddenl y the spaceshi p jum ped and began to m ove round the edge of trhe hol e too. The gravi ty of the “black hol e” was pul li ng us i nto i ts “m outh”. As the spaceshi p m oved round the bl ack hol e, I fel t rather si ck. My m outh went dry and I cl osed m y eyes. Al l the stori es about what happened when you were caught by the gravi ty of a “bl ack hol e” seem to be true. But then the spaceship jum ped agai n. Thi s tim e i t m oved si deways and away from thi s edge of the “bl ack hol e”. Som eone watchi ng m e woul d have seen the spaceshi p flyi ng li ke a bi rd away from the “bl ack hol e”. But we fel t nothi ng. At l ast we were abl e to l ook around us. Luckil y the puter had started worki ng agai n. We real i zed that we had di scovered som ethi ng new about “black hol e”. If you go i nsi de the edge of a “black hol e”, i t wil l “eat” you and there i s no escape。 but i f you do not, you m ay have an opportuni ty to escape. H ow exciti ng! Unit 5 A tri p on “ The True North” Li Dai yu and her cousi n Li u Qi an were on a tri p to Canada to bisi t thei r cousi ns i n Montreal on the Atl anti c coast. Rather than take the aeropl ane al l the way, they deci ded to fl y to Vancouver and then take the train west to east across Canada. The though that they coul d cross the whol e conti nent was exciti ng. Thei r fri end, Danny Li n, was wai ting at the ai rport. H e was goi ng to take them and thei r baggage to catch “The True North”, the cross Canada trai n. O n the way to the stati i on, he chatted about thei r tri p. “You’re goi ng to see som e great scenery. Goi ng eastward, you’l l pass m ountai ns and thousands of l akes and forests, as wel l as wi de ri vers and l arge citi es. Som e peopl e have the i dea that you can cross Canda i n l ess than fi ce days, but they fet the fact that Canada i s 5500 ki lom eters from coast to coast. H ere i n Vancouver, you’re i n Canada’s warm est part. Peopl e say it i s Canada’s m ost beauti ful ci ty, surrounded by m ountai ns and the Paci fi c O cean. Ski i ng i n the Rocky Mountai ns and sail ing i n the harbour m ake Vancouver one of Canada’s m ost popul ar ci ti es to l i ve i n. Its popul ati on i s i ncreasi ng rapi dl y. The coast north of Vancouver has som e of the ol dest and m ost beautiful forests i n the worl d. It i s so wet there that the trees are extrem ely tal l, som e m easuri ng over 90 m etres. ” That afternoon aboard the trai n, the cousins settl ed down i n thei r seats. Earli er that day, when they crossed the Rocky Mountai ns, they m anaged to catch si ght of som e m ountain goats and even a gri zzly bear and an eagl e. Their next stop was Cal gary, whi ch i s fam ous for the Cal gary Stam pede. Cowboys from al over the worl d e to pete i n the Stam pede. Many of them have a gi ft for ri di ng wi l d horses and can win thousands of dol ars i n pri zes. After two days’ travel, the gi rls began to real ize that Canada i s quite em pty. At school, they had l earned that m ost Canadi ans li ve wi thi n a few hundred kil om etres of the USA border, and Canada’s popul ati on i s onl y sli ghtl y over thi rty m il i on, but now they were amazed to se such an em pty country. They went through a wheatgrowi ng provi nce and saw farm s that covered thousands of acres. Afrer di ner, they were back i n an urban area, the busy port ci ty of Thunder Bay at the top of the Great Lakes. Because of the Great Lakes, they l earned, Canada has m ore fresh water than any other country in the worl d. In fact, i t has onethi rd of the worl d’s total fresh water, and much of i t i s i n the Great Lakes. That ni ght as they sl ept, the trai n rushed across the top of Lake Superi or, through the great forests and southward towads Toronto. “The True North” from Toronto to Montreal The next m orning the bushes and m apl e trees outsi de thei r wi ndow were red, gol d and orange, and there was frost on the ground, confi rmi ng that fal l had arri ved i n Canada. Around noon they ari ved in Toronto, the bi gest and m ost weal thy city i n Canada. They were not l eavi ng for Montreal until l ater, so they went on a tour of the ci ty. They went up the tal CN Tower and l ooked acros the l ake. In the di stance, they coul d see the Mi sty cl oud that rose from the great N i agara Fal s, whi ch is on the south si de of the l ake. The water fl ows into the N iagara Ri ver and over the fal ls on its way to the sea. They saw the covered stadi um , hom e of several fam ous basketbal team s. As they wal ked north from the harbour area, Li Dai yu sai d, “Li n Fang, one of my m other’s old schoolm ates, li ves here. I shoul d phone her from a telephone booth. ” They m et Li n Fei around dusk i n downtown Chi natown, one of the three i n Toronto. O ver di nner at a restaurant cal ed The Pi nk Pearl, the cousins chatted wi th Lin Fei , who had m oved to Canada m any years earl i er. “We can get good Cantonese food here, ” Lin Fei tol d them, “ because m ost of the Chinese peopl e here e from South Chi na, especi al l y H ong Kong. It’s too bad you can’t go as far as Ottawa, Canada’s capi tal . It’s approxim atel y four hundred kil om eters northeast of Toronto, so i t woul d take too l ong. ” The trai n l eft l ate that ni ght and arri ved i n Montreal at dawn the next morning. At the station, peopl e everywhe。
阅读剩余 0%
本站所有文章资讯、展示的图片素材等内容均为注册用户上传(部分报媒/平媒内容转载自网络合作媒体),仅供学习参考。 用户通过本站上传、发布的任何内容的知识产权归属用户或原始著作权人所有。如有侵犯您的版权,请联系我们反馈本站将在三个工作日内改正。