Latihan Pertemuan 8
Latihan Pertemuan 8
Latihan Pertemuan 8
Scientists are as obsessed with the question of why the superold survive and thrive as
Ponce de Leon was to find the Fountain of Youth. They want to understand why the Japanese
islands of Okinawa are home to the world’s largest population of centenarians, with almost
600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living into their second century – many of them active and
looking decades younger than their actual years. Like weekend visitors on the summer ferry
to Martha’s Vineyard, scientists and sociologists block the boats to Sardinia and Nova Scotia,
Canada, to see why those craggy locales hide vast clusters of the superold.
It is pretty obvious even to nonscientists that how you get there depends partly on the
genes you are born with and partly on lifestyle – what and how much you eat, where you live
and what types of stress and trauma you experience. How much depends on each factor,
though, was unknown until Swedish scientists tackled the problem in 1998. They did it by
looking at the only set of people who share genes but not lifestyle: identical twins who were
separated at birth and reared apart. If genes were most important, you would expect the twins
to die at about the same age, In fact, they do not, and the average difference convinced the
scientists that only about 20% to 30% of how long we live is genetically determined. The
dominant factor is lifestyle.
Text 2
The human criterion for perfect vision is 20/20 for reading the standard lines on a
Snellen eye chart without a hitch. The score is determined by how well you read lines of
letters of different sizes from 20 feet away. But being able to read the bottom line on the eye
chart does not approximate perfection as far as other species are concerned. Most birds
would consider us very visually handicapped. The hawk, for instance, has such sharp eyes
that it can spot a dime on the sidewalk while perched on top of the Empire State Building. It
can make fine visual distinctions because it is blessed with one million cones per square
millimetre in its retina. And in water, humans are farsighted, while the kingfisher, swooping
down to spear fish, can see well in both the air and water because it is endowed with two
foveae – areas of the eye, consisting mostly of cones that provide visual distinctions. One
foveae permits the bird, while in the air, to scan the water below with one eye at a time.
This is called monocular vision. Once it hits the water, the other fovea joins in, allowing the
kingfisher to focus both eyes, like binoculars, on its prey at the same time. A frog’s vision is
distinguished by its ability to perceive things as a constant motion picture. Known as “bug
detectors”, a highly developed set of cells in a frog’s eyes responds mainly to moving
objects. So, it is said that a frog sitting in a field of dead bugs wouldn’t see them as food and
would starve.
The bee has a “compound” eye, which is used for navigation. It has 15,000 facets
that divide what it sees into a pattern of dots, or mosaic. With this kind of vision, the bee
sees the sun only as a single dot, a constant point of reference. Thus, the eye is a superb
navigational instrument that constantly measures the angle of its line of flight in relation to
the sun. A bee’s eye also gauges flight speed. And if that is not enough to leave our 20/20
“perfect vision” paling into insignificance, the bee is capable of seeing something we can’t
– ultraviolet light. Thus, what humans consider to be “perfect vision” is in fact rather
limited when we look at other species. However, there is still much to be said for the human
eye. Of all the mammals, only humans and some primates can enjoy the pleasures of colour
vision.
6. According to the passage, why might birds and other animals consider humans very
visually handicapped?
A. humans can’t see very well in either air or water
B. human eyes are not as well suited to our needs
C. the main outstanding feature of human eyes is colour vision
D. their eyes can see more colours than human’s can
E. human eyes can’t do what their eyes can
This remarkable discovery represents the first and only example of human remains found in
direct association with extinct megafauna in the Americas, says Rissolo, who is a visiting
scholar at UC San Diego from the Waitt Institute and a research associate at the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography. The remains of two gomphotheres (extinct elephant-like
creatures), two Shasta ground sloths, a pair of saber-toothed cats and numerous other
animals were also found with Naia in the underwater pit, which measures 200 feet in
diameter and is located in the far Southeast of the country, on the Yucután Peninsula.
Computer science Ph.D. student Vid Petrovic – a member of the Center’s Integrative
Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program in cultural heritage
diagnostics – is using photos taken by the scientific dive team to create 3D structure-from-
motion (SfM) models of the cave site, and he has used the same technique to recreate Naia’s
mandible.
SfM is an imaging technique that, in this case, uses two-dimensional photographs taken
underwater at the cave site. Petrovic tracks and aligns features in the photos (such as corner
points) to ‘stitch together’ and reconstruct the objects digitally in 3D.
Rissolo says that given the proper lighting, camera set-up and protocols, SfM is a relatively
straightforward and cost-effective imaging and visualization method, especially for
documenting archaeological sites that are not easily accessible or are threatened with
destruction, either natural or human-derived.
Adapted from: http://archaeologicalconservancy.org
9. According to the text, what remains are not found in Hoyo Negro? The remains of…
A. gomphotheras
B. elephants
C. Shasta ground sloths
D. saber-toothed cats
E. Paleoamerican girl
10. From the sentence ‘… songbirds have been extensively used as a model for imitative
vocal learning, ….’ in paragraph 1, it can be stated that…
A. Songbirds are good models of vocal learning.
B. Human can practice vocal learning through songbird.
C. Songbirds are observed intensively by the scientist.
D. Songbirds imitate human’s speech.
E. Human speech acquisition in inspired by songbird.