Years before the advent of plate tectonics—the widely accepted theory, developed in the mid-1960s, the holds that the major features of Earth's surface are created by the horizontal motions of Earth's outer shell, or lithosphere—a similar theory was rejected by the geological community. In 1912, Alfred Wegener proposed, in a widely debated theory that came to be called continental drift, that Earth's continents were mobile. To most geologists today, Wegener's The Origin of Continents and Oceans appears an impressive and prescient document, containing several of the essential presumptions underlying plate tectonics theory: the horizontal mobility of pieces of Earth's crust; the essential difference between oceanic and continental crust; and a causal connection between horizontal displacements and the formation of mountain chains. Yet despite the considerable overlap between Wegener's concepts and the later widely embraced plate tectonics theory, and despite the fact that continental drift theory presented a possible solution to the problem of the origin of mountains at a time when existing explanations were seriously in doubt, in its day Wegener's theory was rejected by the vast majority of geologists.
Most geologists and many historians today believe that Wegener's theory was rejected because of its lack of an adequate mechanical basis. Stephen Jay Gould, for example, argues that continental drift theory was rejected because it did not explain how continents could move through an apparently oceanic floor. However, as Anthony Hallam has pointed out, many scientific phenomena, such as the ice ages, have been accepted before they could be fully explained. The most likely cause for the rejection of continental drift—a cause that has been largely ignored because we consider Wegener's theory to have been validated by the theory of plate tectonics—is the nature of the evidence that was put forward to support it. Most of Wegener's evidence consisted of homologies—similarities of patterns and forms based on direct observations of rocks in the field, supported by the use of hammers, hand lenses, and field notebooks. In contrast, the data supporting plate tectonics were impressively geophysical—instrumental| determinations of the physical properties of Earth garnered through the use of seismographs, magnetometers, and computers.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
trace the evolution of a scientific theory from its roots in the early twentieth century
present two different explanations for a geologic phenomenon and compare their merits
discuss the reception of a scientific theory and offer an explanation for its rejection
challenge a traditional explanation for a geologic phenomenon
explain the mechanical basis of certain geologic phenomena
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答案:C. discuss the reception of a scientific theory and offer an explanation for its rejection。
因为文章讨论的是在20世纪早期,阿尔弗雷德·韦格纳尔 (Alfred Wegener) 提出的“大陆漂移理论”(continental drift theory) 被接受或拒绝的原因,并给出了一个合理的解释。因此,文章的主要目的是讨论一个科学理论的接受情况以及其拒绝的原因。选项C最能够概括文章的主要目的。
主旨题:通篇讲了continental drift在当时被拒绝,以及探讨被拒绝的原因