人事部三级英语笔译2006-2010真题.pdfVIP

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本资料由中正法律英语翻译网()和中正翻译论坛 (/)收集自互联网。 2006年5月人事部三级笔译真题 第一部分 英译汉 Freedby warming, waters once locked beneath ice are gnawing at coastal settlements aroundthe Arctic Circle. In Bykovsky, a village of 457 on Russias northeast coast, the shoreline is collapsing, creeping closer and closertohouses andtanks of heatingoil, at a rate of 15to18feet a year. It is practically all ice - permafrost - and it is thawing. For the four million people who live north of the Arctic Circle, a changing climate presents new opportunities. But it also threatens their environment, their homes and, for those whose traditions rely onthe ice-boundwilderness, the preservation oftheir culture. A push to develop the North, quickened by the melting of the Arctic seas, carries its own rewards and dangers for people in the region. The discovery of vast petroleum fields in the Barents and Kara Seas has raised fears of catastrophic accidents as ships loaded with oil and, soon, liquefied gas churn through the fisheries off Scandinavia, headed to markets in Europe and North America. Land that was untouched could be tainted by pollutionas generators, smokestacks and large vehicles sprout tosupport the growing energy industry. Coastal erosion is a problem in Alaska as well, forcing the United States to prepare to relocate several Inuit villages at a projected cost of $100million ormore for each one. Across the Arctic, indigenous tribes with traditions shaped by centuries of living inextremes of cold and ice arenoticingchanges inweather andwildlife. Theyare trying toadapt, but it canbe confounding. In Finnmark, Norways northernmost province, the Arctic landscape unfolds in late winter as an endless snowyplateau, silent but forthe cries of the reindeer andthe occasional whine of a snowmobile herdingthem. A changing Arctic is felt there, too. The reindeer are becoming unhappy, said Issat Eira, a 31-year-old reindeerherd

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