In 1975 Chinese survey teams remeasured Mount Everest, the highest of the Himalayan mountains. Like the British in 1852, they used the age-old technique of "carrying in" sea level: surveyors marched inland from the coast for thousands of miles, stopping at increments of as little as a few feet to measure their elevation, and marking each increment with two poles. To measure the difference in elevation between poles, surveyors used an optical level - a telescope on a level base - placed halfway between the poles. They sighted each pole, reading off measurements that were then used to calculate the change in elevation over each increment. In sight of the peaks the used theodolites - telescopes for measuring vertical and horizontal angles - to determine the elevation of the summit.

The Chinese, however, made efforts to correct for the errors that had plagued the British. One source of error is refraction, the bending of light beams as they pass through air layers of different temperature and pressure. Because light traveling. down from a summit passes through many such layers, a surveyor could sight a mirage rather than the peak itself. To reduce refraction errors, the Chinese team carried in sea level to within five to twelve miles of Everest's summit, decreasing the amount of air that light passed through on its way to their theodolites. The Chinese also launched weather balloons near their theodolites to measure atmospheric temperature and pressure changes to better estimate refraction errors. Another hurdle is the peak's shape. When surveyors sight the summit. there is a risk they might not all measure the same point. In 1975 the Chinese installed the first survey beacon on Everest, a red reflector visible through a theodolite for ten miles, as a reference point. One ore source of error is the unevenness of sea level. The British assumed that carrying in sea level would extend an imaginary line from the shore along Earth's curve to a point beneath the Himalaya. In reality, sea level varies according to the irregular interior of the planet. The Chinese used a gravity meter to correct for local deviations in sea level.


The primary purpose of the passage is to


provide details about improvements to a process

challenge the assumptions underlying a new method

criticize the way in which a failed project was carried out

call for new methods to solve an existing problem

explain the theory behind a new technique

考题讲解

此讲解的内容由AI生成,还未经人工审阅,仅供参考。

正确答案是 A。主要目的文章是提供关于一种过程的改进的细节。文章讲述了1975年中国的调查小组重新测量喜马拉雅山峰(Mount Everest)的过程,并比较了他们与1852年英国调查队采用的测量技术。文章还提出了一些改进措施,以减少误差,比如使用光学水准仪和天文仪,安装红光反射器,以及降低空气层数量,使用重力仪等,从而提高测量准确度。

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