A gift of the gods. According to an old Greek myth, Prometheus and his brother, Epimetheus, heroes of a race of giants called the Titans, were given the task of creating man. Epimetheus was also to provide all the animals with means of defense or flight. To some he gave courage, strength, and claws with which to fight, and to others long legs, nimble feet, or wings with which to escape. So lavish was he with these gifts to the lower animals that he had nothing left to give to man. Prometheus, however, was determined that man should not be neglected and so, according to the myth, he gained access to heaven and lighted his torch at the chariot of the sun. Returning to earth, he presented fire to man, and with this gift came mans dominion over all the earth.
The first cook. It took a long time, however, to learn how to use this gift. For centuries men lived like wild animals. Their food consisted of nuts, herbs, fruit, and the flesh of animals. Cooking was unknown, and when a wild animal was captured, the savage tore it apart and ate the raw flesh. According to one legend, a hunter, after a long tramp, succeeded in catching a rabbit. On his way home he found a smoldering fire which had been started by lightning. Throwing his rabbit on a log, he lay down and went to sleep. When he awoke, he found that his rabbit had fallen into the fire. In attempting to rescue it, the savage got some of the juice of the roasted rabbit on his fingers. By instinct, he put his burnt fingers to his mouth, and the taste was so pleasing that he immediately finished the rabbit, and this is how man learned to cook.
Reduction of metals. Ages later, man began to use fire to make metals and to form them into spears and hatchets for hunting and fighting. The alchemists, as we know, used fire in their attempts to change the base metals into gold, and today fires are burning in many furnaces producing, if not gold, metals of far greater value to the progress of civilization. Copper, bronze, iron, and steel, produced by fire, have been the stepping stones of mans progress through the ages. The chemistry involved in the extraction, purification, and alloying of metals is so interesting and of such great importance that volumes have been written on this subject.
Heating homes. We are so accustomed to living in heated homes that it is only when something goes wrong with the furnace that we give any thought to the blessed fire. To the savage shivering in his cave, however, a fire was a real blessing, even if it did fill his eyes with smoke. Keeping the home fires burning
was a difficult task for the American Indian, who delegated this to his wife. Woe be to the squaw who let the fire go out. In the wintertime, the fire was built on the ground in the center of the tent, which had a small hole in the top to act as a smokestack. Even the palaces of the wealthy in the Middle Ages were cold and damp, the fireplaces being so inefficient that only a portion of one room could be heated at a time. Not until a comparatively recent date were stoves invented, and furnaces were unknown even when your grandfather was a boy.
How fires are started and stopped. You have learned that burning is rapid oxidation which gives off light and heat. In order to start a fire, three conditions are necessary: something to burn; something to support the combustion; and a means of lighting the fuel . Having lived all his life in a home where the furnace is kept burning all winter, the average person seldom thinks of the difficulty of starting a fire.
To get some idea of the difficulty of starting fires, imagine yourself shipwrecked like Robinson Crusoe upon an uninhabited island. To build a fire, the first condition would be met by collecting some wood. The second condition would be no problem as air is always present to support combustion. The third condition, raising the fuel to its kindling temperature, would offer a real difficulty. Two methods have been used. The first is to employ the heat of friction caused by rubbing two dry sticks together. This sounds simple, but much skill and practice are essential to the success of this operation. The second method is to make sparks by striking two pieces of flint together. This may work if the operator is persistent and if his fuel is sufficiently fine and dry. But before he succeeds in getting a fire started by either method, our Robinson Crusoe will do some thinking about the usefulness of the common match.
Poison matches. There are two kinds of phosphorus used in making matches, white and red. White phosphorus has an advantage and a disadvantage. White phosphorus is cheaper and, at one time, its use was quite common. White phosphorus is poisonous, however, and for this reason its use in making matches is prohibited by law in nearly all civilized countries. Men working in match factories which used white phosphorus were subject to a disease which caused the jaw bones to decay. The danger of small children being
poisoned by these matches is also evident.
Fortunately, chemists have discovered a method of making a form of phosphorus which is not poisonous. When white phosphorus is gently heated for several hours in a closed vessel from which air is excluded, it slowly changes in color and the no-poisonous red phosphorus is formed. In addition to the fact that it is not poisonous, red phosphorus has other advantages. Its kindling temperature is much higher than that of the white variety, and this makes red phosphorus less dangerous to ship and to store. Another method of making phosphorus safe for use in matches is to combine it with sulphur. To do this, the two elements are mixed and heated in the absence of air. The phosphorus sulphide, which is formed, is not poisonous.
1. With the help of his brother, Prometheus succeeded in presenting fire to man.
2. Fire gave man an advantage over other animals.
3. Man learned to cook by accident.
4. In the Middle Ages even the palaces of the wealthy were cold because wood was much too expensive.
5. In striking a match, friction raises the phosphorus compound in the tip to the kindling temperature.
6. Red phosphorus is the only means of making phosphorus safe.
7. Fire has played an important role in the progress of civilization.
8. The small hole in the top of the American Indian tent was used as a______.
9. Employees in match factories used to suffer from a disease______the jaw bones.
10. Air is needed to start a fire because it______.
I. N 2. Y 3. Y 4. N 5. NG 6. N 7. Y
8. smokestack 9. which decayed 10. supports combustion
2017届高考英语听力素材:记忆篇 25 the apple tree
2017届高考英语听力素材:名篇名段 23 The study of words
2017届高考英语阅读素材:徐志摩:《再别康桥》
2017届高考英语阅读素材:双语欣赏:与其诅咒黑暗 不如燃起蜡烛
2017届高考英语一轮总复习语法专题复习课件:非谓语动词
2017届高考英语听力素材:记忆篇 19 mothers hands
2017届高考英语阅读素材:提升你的智力
2017届高考英语阅读素材:一个母亲一生撒的8个谎言
2017届高考英语阅读素材:甜蜜爱情的十大禁忌
2017届高考英语阅读素材:勇敢生活:如何征服对生活的恐惧
2017届高考英语阅读素材:上帝不会问的十件事
2017届高考英语阅读素材:我们一直在学习什么
2017届高考英语阅读素材:如何在群体中表现得更加活跃
2017届高考英语听力素材:名篇名段 21 The English character
2017届高考英语阅读素材:生活睿智
2017届高考英语听力素材:名篇名段 22 The use of history
2017届高考英语听力素材:记忆篇 24 a letter to my son
2017届高考英语阅读素材:如何增强自己的意志力
2017届高考英语阅读素材:抓住你生命中的那颗星
2017届高考英语阅读素材:烛心 (中英对照)
2017届高考英语阅读素材:著名的英文情书选登
2017届高考英语听力素材:名篇名段 29 The English and the Americans
2017届高考英语听力素材:记忆篇 23 forgotten and forgiven
2017届高考英语听力素材:名篇名段 24 Did you deal with fotune fairly
2017届高考英语阅读素材:笑对生活
2017届高考英语阅读素材:生活半对半 The 50-Percent Theory of Life
2017届高考英语阅读素材:史上最经典的名人情书汇总
2017届高考英语阅读素材:守住爱情
2017届高考英语阅读素材:想富贵,别上学
2017届高考英语阅读素材:生活贴士:5个简单方法,带给你平静的心情
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |