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TEXT C A period of climate change about 130,000 years ago would have made water travel easier by lowering sea levels and creating navigable lakes and rivers in the Arabian Peninsula, the study says. Such a shift would have offered early modern humans-which arose in Africa about 200,000 years ago-a new route through the formerly scorching northern deserts into the Middle East. The new paper was spurred by the discovery of several 120,000-year-old tools at a desert archaeological site in the United Arab Emirates. The presence of the tools-whose design is uniquely African, experts say-so early in the region suggests early humans marched out of Africa into the Arabian Peninsula directly from the Horn of Africa, roughly present- day Somalia. Previously, scientists had thought humans first left via the Nile Valley or the Far East. 'Up till now we thought of cultural developments leading to the opportunity of people to move out of Africa, ' said study co-author Hans-Peter Uerpmann, a retired archaeobiologist at the University of tübingen in Germany. 'Now we see, I think, that it was the environment that was the key to this,' Uerpmann said during a press brie6ng Wednesday. The discovery 'leaves a lot of possibilities for human migrations, and keeping this in mind, might change our view completely.' During the past few years, a series of tools were discovered at the Jebel Faya site in the U.A.E., some of which-such as hand axes-had a two-sided appearance previously seen only in early Africa. Scientists used luminescence dating to determine the age of sand grains buried with the stone tools. This technique measures naturally occurring radiation stored in the sand. For the climatic data, scientists studied the climate records of ancient lakes and rivers in cave stalagmites, as well as changes in the level of the Red Sea. This warmer period 130,000 years or so ago caused more rainfall on the Arabian Peninsula, turning it into a series of lush rivers that humans might have boated or rafted. During this period the southern Red Sea's levels dropped, offering a 'brief window of time' for humans to easily cross the sea-which was then as little as 2.5 miles wide, according to Adrian Parker, a physical geographer from Oxford Brookes University in the United Kingdom. Once humans entered the peninsula, they dispersed and likely reached the Jebel Faya site by about 125,000 years ago, according to the study, published in the journal Science. Geneticist Spencer Wells called the discovery a 'very :interesting find,' especially because the Arabian Peninsula is becoming a hot spot for archaeological finds-particularly underwater, since the Persian Gulf was a fertile river delta during early human migrations. But he noted that the study doesn't 'rewrite the book on what we know about human migratory history.' That's because tools dating to the same period have already been found in Israel, so it's 'consistent with what we suspected' about an earlier wave of m1E7'ation into the Middle East, said Wells, director of the National Geographic Society's Geographic Project. Wells also noted there's no evidence yet that the migrants in the new paper were our ancestors-the group, and their genes, may have died out long ago. Bence Viola, of the Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, agreed the finding was interesting but not that surprising, also citing the evidence of humans in Israel about 120,000 years ago. Viola, who wasn't involved in the study, added that the migration route proposed in the paper makes sense on another level-the Arabian Peninsula would have been something early humans were used to. 'If you look even today, the environment in the Hotn of Africa, in Somalia or northern Ethiopia, is similar to what you see in Oman or Yemen-not like the big desert,' Viola noted. 'It's not like they needed to adapt to a completely different environment-it's an environment that they knew.' Why they made the trek is another question since they wouldn't have been hurting for food or re- sources in their African homeland, Viola noted. 'Curiosity,' he said, 'is a pretty human desire.' The word 'scorching' in the first paragraph means [A] aboriginal. [B] primitive. [C] luxuriant. [D] baking-hot.
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【简答题】简述海岸带、潮间带的地形测量的传统方法,有什么特点?
【多选题】计算机病毒的表现模块能够
A.
将病毒主体从外存载到内存
B.
判断病毒的触发条件
C.
实施病毒的破坏功能
D.
将病毒的代码复制到传染目标上去
【单选题】职业道德在社会主义时期,它是社会主义道德原则在职业生活和()中的具体体现。
A.
职业技能
B.
职业文化
C.
职业守则
D.
职业关系
【单选题】把课程设计过程概括为确定教育目标、选择学习经验、组织学习经验、评价结果这样四个步骤的研究专家是( )
A.
博比特
B.
泰勒
C.
布卢姆
D.
布鲁纳
【单选题】您认为以下哪些方式在上课的时候是必要的
A.
借助 PPT
B.
视频教学
C.
学生试讲
D.
只需要听老师讲
E.
有师生互动
【单选题】用药剂量过大对机体产生的危害性反应属于()
A.
后遗效应
B.
停药反应
C.
毒性反应
D.
副作用
【多选题】对组织行为规律研究的四个步骤过程分别是______
A.
观察和实验
B.
形成假设
C.
分析和评价
D.
预测和推断
E.
检查和验证
【判断题】压花用的花胶就是煲汤用的花胶。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】判断病毒的触发条件,实施病毒的破坏功能的模块是()。
A.
传染模块
B.
引导模块
C.
表现模块
D.
以上都不是
【单选题】即期汇率等于远期汇率称为( )
A.
升水
B.
贴水
C.
平价
D.
中间价
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