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Standard museum practice can wash away DNA. 1.Washing, brushing and varnishing fossils — all standard conservation treatments used by many fossil hunters and museum curators alike — vastly reduces the chances of recovering ancient DNA. 2.Instead, excavators should be handling at least some of their bounty with gloves, and freezing samples as they are found, dirt and all, concludes a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today. 3.Although many palaeontologists know anecdotally that this is the best way to up the odds of extracting good DNA, Eva-Maria Geigl of the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris, France, and her colleagues have now shown just how important conservation practices can be.This information, they say, needs to be hammered home among the people who are actually out in the field digging up bones. 4.Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year-old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs.The fossils were dug up at a site in France at two different times — either in 1947, and stored in a museum collection, or in 2004, and conserved in sterile conditions at -20 oC. 5.The team's attempts to extract DNA from the 1947 bones all failed.The newly excavated fossils, however, all yielded DNA. 6.Because the bones had been buried for the same amount of time, and in the same conditions, the conservation method had to be to blame says Geigl."As much DNA was degraded in these 57 years as in the 3,200 years before," she says. Wash in, wash out 7.Because many palaeontologists base their work on the shape of fossils alone, their methods of conservation are not designed to preserve DNA, Geigl explains. 8.The biggest problem is how they are cleaned.Fossils are often washed together on-site in a large bath, which can allow water — and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA — to permeate into the porous bones."Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in," says Geigl. 9.Most ancient DNA specialists know this already, says Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.But that doesn't mean that best practice has become widespread among those who actually find the fossils. 10.Getting hold of fossils that have been preserved with their DNA in mind relies on close relationships between lab-based geneticists and the excavators, says palaeogeneticist Svante P bo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.And that only occurs in exceptional cases, he says. 11.P bo's team, which has been sequencing Neanderthal DNA, continually faces these problems."When you want to study ancient human and Neanderthal remains, there's a big issue of contamination with contemporary human DNA," he says. 12.This doesn't mean that all museum specimens are fatally flawed, notes P bo.The Neanderthal fossils that were recently sequenced in his own lab, for example, had been part of a museum collection treated in the traditional way.But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigl's recommendations — just in case. Warm and wet 13.Geigl herself believes that, with cooperation between bench and field researchers, preserving fossils properly could open up avenues of discovery that have long been assumed closed. 14.Much human cultural development took place in temperate regions.DNA does not survive well in warm environments in the first place, and can vanish when fossils are washed and treated.For this reason, Geigl says, most ancient DNA studies have been done on permafrost samples, such as the woolly mammoth, or on remains sheltered from the elements in cold caves — including cave bear and Neanderthal fossils. 15.Better conservation methods, and a focus on fresh fossils, could boost DNA extraction from more delicate specimens, says Geigl.And that could shed more light on the story of human evolution. (640 words nature ) Glossary Palaeontologists 古生物学家 Aurochs 欧洲野牛 Neanderthal (人类学)尼安德特人,旧石器时代的古人类。 Permafrost (地理)永冻层 Questions 1-6 Answer the following questions by using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. 1.How did people traditionally treat fossils? 2.What suggestions do Geigl and her colleagues give on what should be done when fossils are found? 3.What problems may be posed if fossil bones are washed on-site? Name ONE. 4.What characteristic do fossil bones have to make them susceptible to be contaminated with contemporary DNA when they are washed? 5.What could be better understood when conservation treatments are improved? 6.The passage mentioned several animal species studied by researchers.How many of them are mentioned? Questions 7-11 Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? Please write TRUE if the statement agrees with the writer FALSE if the statement does not agree with the writer NOT GIVEN if there is no information about this in the passage. 7.In their paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,Geigl and her colleagues have shown what conservation practices should be followed to preserve ancient DNA. 8.The fossil bones that Geigl and her colleagues studied are all from the same aurochs. 9.Geneticists don't have to work on site. 10.Only newly excavated fossil bones using new conservation methods suggested by Geigl and her colleagues contain ancient DNA. 11.Paabo is still worried about the potential problems caused by treatments of fossils in traditional way. Questions 12-13 Complete the following the statements by choosing letter A-D for each answer. 12.“This information” in paragraph 3 indicates: [A] It is critical to follow proper practices in preserving ancient DNA. [B] The best way of getting good DNA is to handle fossils with gloves. [C] Fossil hunters should wear home-made hammers while digging up bones. [D] Many palaeontologists know how one should do in treating fossils. 13.The study conducted by Geigl and her colleagues suggests: [A] the fact that ancient DNA can not be recovered from fossil bones excavated in the past. [B] the correlation between the amount of burying time and that of the recovered DNA. [C] the pace at which DNA degrades. [D] the correlation between conservation practices and degradation of DNA.
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Don't wash those fossils!

Standard museum practice can wash away DNA.

1.Washing, brushing and varnishing fossils — all standard conservation treatments used by many fossil hunters and museum curators alike — vastly reduces the chances of recovering ancient DNA.

2.Instead, excavators should be handling at least some of their bounty with gloves, and freezing samples as they are found, dirt and all, concludes a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today.

3.Although many palaeontologists know anecdotally that this is the best way to up the odds of extracting good DNA, Eva-Maria Geigl of the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris, France, and her colleagues have now shown just how important conservation practices can be.This information, they say, needs to be hammered home among the people who are actually out in the field digging up bones.

4.Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year-old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs.The fossils were dug up at a site in France at two different times — either in 1947, and stored in a museum collection, or in 2004, and conserved in sterile conditions at -20 oC.

5.The team's attempts to extract DNA from the 1947 bones all failed.The newly excavated fossils, however, all yielded DNA.

6.Because the bones had been buried for the same amount of time, and in the same conditions, the conservation method had to be to blame says Geigl."As much DNA was degraded in these 57 years as in the 3,200 years before," she says.

Wash in, wash out

7.Because many palaeontologists base their work on the shape of fossils alone, their methods of conservation are not designed to preserve DNA, Geigl explains.

8.The biggest problem is how they are cleaned.Fossils are often washed together on-site in a large bath, which can allow water — and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA — to permeate into the porous bones."Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in," says Geigl.

9.Most ancient DNA specialists know this already, says Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.But that doesn't mean that best practice has become widespread among those who actually find the fossils.

10.Getting hold of fossils that have been preserved with their DNA in mind relies on close relationships between lab-based geneticists and the excavators, says palaeogeneticist Svante P bo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.And that only occurs in exceptional cases, he says.

11.P bo's team, which has been sequencing Neanderthal DNA, continually faces these problems."When you want to study ancient human and Neanderthal remains, there's a big issue of contamination with contemporary human DNA," he says.

12.This doesn't mean that all museum specimens are fatally flawed, notes P bo.The Neanderthal fossils that were recently sequenced in his own lab, for example, had been part of a museum collection treated in the traditional way.But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigl's recommendations — just in case.

Warm and wet

13.Geigl herself believes that, with cooperation between bench and field researchers, preserving fossils properly could open up avenues of discovery that have long been assumed closed.

14.Much human cultural development took place in temperate regions.DNA does not survive well in warm environments in the first place, and can vanish when fossils are washed and treated.For this reason, Geigl says, most ancient DNA studies have been done on permafrost samples, such as the woolly mammoth, or on remains sheltered from the elements in cold caves — including cave bear and Neanderthal fossils.

15.Better conservation methods, and a focus on fresh fossils, could boost DNA extraction from more delicate specimens, says Geigl.And that could shed more light on the story of human evolution.

(640 words nature )

Glossary

Palaeontologists 古生物学家

Aurochs 欧洲野牛

Neanderthal (人类学)尼安德特人,旧石器时代的古人类。

Permafrost (地理)永冻层

Questions 1-6

Answer the following questions by using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.

1.How did people traditionally treat fossils?

2.What suggestions do Geigl and her colleagues give on what should be done when fossils are found?

3.What problems may be posed if fossil bones are washed on-site? Name ONE.

4.What characteristic do fossil bones have to make them susceptible to be contaminated with contemporary DNA when they are washed?

5.What could be better understood when conservation treatments are improved?

6.The passage mentioned several animal species studied by researchers.How many of them are mentioned?

Questions 7-11

Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? Please write TRUE if the statement agrees with the writer FALSE if the statement does not agree with the writer NOT GIVEN if there is no information about this in the passage.

7.In their paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,Geigl and her colleagues have shown what conservation practices should be followed to preserve ancient DNA.

8.The fossil bones that Geigl and her colleagues studied are all from the same aurochs.

9.Geneticists don't have to work on site.

10.Only newly excavated fossil bones using new conservation methods suggested by Geigl and her colleagues contain ancient DNA.

11.Paabo is still worried about the potential problems caused by treatments of fossils in traditional way.

Questions 12-13

Complete the following the statements by choosing letter A-D for each answer.

12.“This information” in paragraph 3 indicates:

[A] It is critical to follow proper practices in preserving ancient DNA.

[B] The best way of getting good DNA is to handle fossils with gloves.

[C] Fossil hunters should wear home-made hammers while digging up bones.

[D] Many palaeontologists know how one should do in treating fossils.

13.The study conducted by Geigl and her colleagues suggests:

[A] the fact that ancient DNA can not be recovered from fossil bones excavated in the past.

[B] the correlation between the amount of burying time and that of the recovered DNA.

[C] the pace at which DNA degrades.

[D] the correlation between conservation practices and degradation of DNA.

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正确答案:

1.washing, brushing, varnishing 见第一段。

2.handling with gloves / freezing samples ( any one of the two ) 见第二段。

3.losing authentic DNA / being contaminated / contamination ( any one of the three) 见第八段“Not only is the authentic DNA getting washed out, but contamination is getting washed in”(答being contaminated或 contamination比较保险)

4.they are porous porous 的意思是多孔的。见第八段“...which can allow water — and contaminants in the form of contemporary DNA — to permeate into the porous bones.”

5.human evolution 见第十五段。其中“shed light on sth”的意思是使某事显得非常清楚,使人了解某事。

6.4 分别为第四段的“an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs”,即欧洲野牛,已经绝迹;第十一段“Neanderthal”, 是人类学用语,尼安德特人,旧石器时代的古人类;第十四段“woolly mammoth”和“cave bear”,其中mammoth是猛犸,一种古哺乳动物。

7.T 见第二段。

8.T 见第四段“Geigl and her colleagues looked at 3,200-year-old fossil bones belonging to a single individual of an extinct cattle species, called an aurochs.”即他们研究的骨化石是一头欧洲野牛身上的。

9.NG

10.F 见第十二段第一、二句话。

11.T 见第十二段末句“But P bo is keen to see samples of fossils from every major find preserved in line with Geigl's recommendations — just in case.”意即为保险起见,Paabo还是非常希望见到用Geigl建议的方法保存的化石样本。“just in case” 的意思是以防万一,就是Paabo对用传统保存处理的化石不放心的意思。

12.A 见第三段。This information就是前一句中“...just how important conservation practices can be”(to preserve good DNA)。“be hammered”之中hammer一词的意思是不断重复强调。

13.D 面信息。需要理解文章各处关于Geigl和她的同事所作的研究。

答案解析:

暂无解析

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C酒业公司位于华南地区,占地 58 万平方米, 年产各类白酒20 万吨。 公司有员工 3000人,安全生产管理部门有专职安全生产管理人员7 人。C酒业公司有粮库1 个,粮食粉碎车间 3 个,发酵酿造车间 12 个,露天储酒罐区 1 个,勾调车间 4 个、灌装车间 8 个、成品酒仓库 8 个、包装物品仓库4 个。动力车间 1 个、设备车间 1 个,污水处理车间1 个,员工食堂 3 个,浴室 5 个。露天储酒罐区位地上式罐区,有1003立式固定顶储罐130 个,储罐之间的距离为0.倍罐径: 250m3历史固定顶储罐100 个。储罐之间的距离为0.9 倍罐径,露天储酒罐区的防护重点是防火、防爆、防泄漏、防雷击。罐区设置避雷针16 组,露天储酒罐区与厂内主干道路边之间的防火距为12m;事故存液地容积为200m3。 粮食粉碎车间通过负责除尘系统收集机械磨碎过程中产生的粮食粉尘,除尘系统使用防静电布袋除尘,除尘管道采用Ф500mm镀锌管道,法兰盘连接,并对法兰盘防静电跨接,管道按规定接地。 C酒业公司为粮食粉碎车间员工配发了防静电服,防静电鞋,防尘口罩和防尘帽。发酵酿造车间窖池属有限空间, 2014 年 10 月曾经发生过一起员工在清理窖池作业时的中毒与窒息事件,因抢救及时,未造成员工伤亡,在此之后,C酒业公司严格执行国家安全生产监督管理总局《有限空间安全作业五条规定》,完善了有限空间作业管理制度。灌装车间为了减少流水线作业噪声对员工的影响,为员工配发了耳塞。动力车间有 10kv 配电室 1 个, 20t/h 锅炉 2 台。设备车间有数控车床8 台,设备车间有数控车床8 台,普通车床 2 台,铣床 2 台,钻床1 台以及电焊、气焊设备,气瓶若干。污水处理车间主要处理发酵酿造过程中的污水,处理量800t/d 。C就业公司另有 10t 桥式起重设备 3 台,5t 桥式起重设备 5 台,客货梯 5 部,场内机动车辆 130 辆(其中叉车 80 辆)以及一支货物运输车队。 2014 年年末安全生产大检查期间,属地人民政府安全生产监督管理部门对C 酒业公司露天储酒罐区进行了专项安全生产检查。检查中注意到,避雷装置上一次检测时间为2014年 3 月,罐区上方架设有临时用电线,罐区作业人员甲、乙身着普通工作服,用真空泵从罐车往储罐输送原酒,罐车罐体未连接到静电释放装置。 问题: 1.根据《职业病分类和目录》 (国卫疾控发 [2013]48 号),辨识 C酒业公司可能存在的职业病类别并说明原因。 2. 指出 C酒业公司特种设备的种类。 3. 简述 C酒业公司在发酵酿造车间严格执行《有限空间安全作业五条规定》(安监总局令第 69 号)的具体内容。 4. 简述 C酒业公司露天储酒罐区存在的事故隐患并说明理由。
试题分类: 安全生产事故案例分析
练习次数:23次
某工程分A、B两个监理标段同时进行招标,建设单位规定参与投标的监理单位只能选择A或B标段进行投标。工程实施过程中,发生如下事件: 【事件1】:在监理招标时,建设单位提出: (1)投标人必须具有工程所在地域类似工程监理业绩; (2)应组织外地投标人考察施工现场; (3)投标有效期自投标人送达投标文件之日起算; (4)委托监理单位有偿负责外部协调工作。 【事件2】:拟投标的某监理单位在进行投标决策时,组织专家及相关人员对A、B两个标段进行了比较分析,确定的主要评价指标、相应权重及相对于A、B两个标段的竞争力分值见表 2014—2—1。 表 2014-2-1评价指标、权重及竞争分值 【事件3】:建设单位与A标段中标监理单位按《建设工程监理合同(示范文本)》(GF-2012-0202 )签订了监理合同, 并在监理合同专用条件中约定附加工作酬金为20万元 /月。监理合同履行过程中, 由于建设单位资金未到位致使工程停工,导致监理合同暂停履行,半年后恢复。 监理单位暂停履行合同的善后工作时间为1个月,恢复履行的准备工作时间为1个月。 【事件4】:建设单位与施工单位按《建设工程施工合同(示范文本)》(GF-2013-0201)签订了施工合同, 施工单位按合同约定将土方开挖工程分包,分包单位在土方开挖工程开工前编制了深基坑工程专项施工方案并进行了安全验算,经分包单位技术负责人审核签字后,即报送项目监理机构。 问题: 1、逐条指出事件1中建设单位的要求是否妥当,并对不妥之处说明理由。 2、事件2中,根据表2—1,分别计算A、B两个标段各项评价指标的加权得分及综合竞争力得分,并指出监理单位应优先选择哪个标段投标。 3、计算事件3中监理单位可获得的附加工作酬金。 4、指出事件4中有哪些不妥,分别写出正确做法。
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