【已刪除】50. Which of the following statements is true?
(A) The term handprints was first proposed by Elke Weber.
(B) The idea of carbon footprints severely frustrated Norris’ students.
(C) The author likes the idea of a national contest of hand size.
(D) Handprints show the harms human beings do to the earth.
Passage C
The Cedar of Lebanon was important to various ancient civilizations. The trees were used by the Phoenicians for building
commercial and military ships, as well as houses, palaces, and temples. The ancient Egyptians used its resin in mummification,
and its sawdust has been found in the tombs of Egyptian Pharaohs. The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh designates the cedar
groves of Lebanon as the dwelling of the gods to which Gilgamesh, the hero, ventured.
Hebrew priests were ordered by Moses to use the bark of the Lebanon Cedar in circumcision
and the treatment of leprosy.
The Hebrew prophet Isaiah used the Lebanon Cedar as a metaphor for the pride of the world. According to the Talmud, the
Jews once burned Lebanese cedar wood on the Mount of Olives to celebrate the new year. Foreign rulers from both near and
far would order the wood for religious and civil constructs, the most famous of which are King Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem
and David's and Solomon's Palaces. Because of its significance the word Cedar is mentioned 75 times (Cedar 51 times, Cedars
24 times) in the Bible, and played a pivotal role in the cementing of the Phoenician-Hebrew relationship. Beyond that, it was
also used by Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks and Romans.
Over the centuries, extensive deforestation has occurred, with only small remnants of the original forests surviving.
Deforestation has been particularly severe in Lebanon and on Cyprus; on Cyprus, only small trees up to 25 m (82 ft) tall
survive, though Pliny the Elder recorded cedars 40 m (130 ft) tall there. Extensive reforestation of cedar is carried out in the
Mediterranean region, particularly Turkey, where over 50 million young cedars are being planted annually. The Lebanese
populations are also now expanding through a combination of replanting and protection of natural regeneration from browsing
by goats, hunting, forest fires, and woodworms.