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[@english books new] IELTS Reading Academic Actual Tests (1)

170 | 
P a g e
 
4. The extinction of large herbivores in Europe adds to speculation that Vera’s theory 
might not be as applicable to Britain.
5. The persistence of oak in Britain supports Francis Vera’s theory.
6. The sharp decline in elm around 4000 BC is more likely to be the result of clearance 
than elm disease.
7. The first evidence of clearance of land for agriculture appears at the end of the Bronze 
Age.
8. The practice of coppicing is traceable back to the Neolithic period.
9. The Black Death negatively impacted growth of forests of Europe.
Questions 10-14 
Look at the following items (Questions 10-14) and a list of periods of time below. 
Match each item with the period of time it best corresponds with 
Write the correct number A-F in boxes Questions 10-14 on your answer sheet. 
NB You may use any letter more than once. 
A list of periods of time 
1. The Palaeolithic era 
2. The Bronze age 
3. The Iron age 
4. The Medieval era 
5. The Mesolithic age 
6. Roman times 
10. Every type of wood in England belonged to some person or some community.
11. People used woodworking to create elaborate boats, houses, and wheels.
12. Animals kept expansive areas of land clear without human interference.
13. Coppicing was first used for woodland management.
14. Houses were made with short pieces of wood, and longer pieces were used for 
religious buildings.


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171 | 
P a g e
 
SECTION 2 
The Ingenuity Gap 
A. 
Ingenuity, as I define it here, consists not only of ideas for new technologies like 
computers or drought-resistant crops but, more fundamentally, of ideas for better 
institutions and social arrangements, like efficient markets and competent governments. 
B. 
How much and what kinds of ingenuity a society requires depends on a range of 
factors, including the society’s goals and the circumstances within which it must achieve 
those goals
—whether it has a young population or an ageing one, an abundance of 
natural resources or a scarcity of them, an easy climate or a punishing one, whatever 
the case may be. 
C.
How much and what kinds of ingenuity a society supplies also depends on many 
factors, such as the nature of human inventiveness and understanding, the rewards an 
economy gives to the producers of useful knowledge, and the strength of political 
opposition to social and institutional reforms. 
D. 
A good supply 
of the right kind of ingenuity is essential, but it isn’t, of course, enough 
by itself. We know that the creation of wealth, for example, depends not only on an 
adequate supply of useful ideas but also on the availability of other, more conventional 
factors of production, like capital and labor. Similarly, prosperity, stability and justice 
usually depend on the resolution, or at least the containment, of major political struggles 
over wealth and power. Yet within our economies ingenuity often supplants labor, and 
growth in the stock of physical plant is usually accompanied by growth in the stock of 
ingenuity. And in our political systems, we need great ingenuity to set up institutions that 
successfully manage struggles over wealth and power. Clearly, our economic and 
political processes are intimately entangled with the production and use of ingenuity. 
E. 
The past century’s countless incremental changes in our societies around the planet, 
in our technologies and our interactions with our surrounding natural environments, have 
accumulated to create a qualitatively new world. Because these changes have 
accumulated slowly, it’s often hard for us to recognize how profound and sweeping 
they’ve been. They include far larger and denser populations; much higher per capita 
consumption of natural resources; and far better and more widely available technologies 
for the movement of people, materials, and especially information. 
F.
In combination, these changes have sharply increased the density, intensity, and pace 
of our interactions with each other; they have greatly increased the burden we place on 
our natural environment; and they have helped shift power from national and international 


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