Passage 2 For much of the year, Bernd Heinrich spends his time at a cabin he built in a remote
forest in western Maine. 34 , he says, “just a tree growing inside it.” An emeritus biology
professor at the University of Vermont, Dr. Heinrich, 72, sees the New England forest as a
living laboratory to study nature’s changes. Over the years he has translated his observations
into 17 popular books on nature and the animal world, including ones on bumblebees, dung
beetles and geese. 35 According to Dr. Heinrich, human death is becoming more and
more divorced from nature.
【題組】35.
(A) Lately he has been studying how creatures die.
(B) Currently he has been thinking about the dying nature.
(C) Unfortunately, he has just divorced his wife.
(D) Recently human nature has preoccupied his study.