2019-2020年高中英語(yǔ) Unit5第6課時(shí)(文化背景知識(shí))教案 新人教版選修8.doc
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2019-2020年高中英語(yǔ) Unit5第6課時(shí)(文化背景知識(shí))教案 新人教版選修8 文化背景知識(shí) The Peking Man World Heritage Site at Zhoukoudian Zhoukoudian is a small village situated about 50 km southwest of Beijing. Embraced by a chain of mountains from the northwest and rolling hills from the northeast, the village opens to the vast Huabei plains. One half kilometre north, one finds a narrow pass leading to a basin. Baerhe stream wriggles out of the pass and flows down south. It passes then to the west of Zhoukoudian and finally drains into Liulihe about 10 km south of the village. The Peking Man Site is just on the west side of Zhoukoudian Village. The exposure of sedimentary strata around Zhoukoudian is quite extraordinary, especially those of the Pliocene and Pleistocene, and therefore attract geologists to visit the area. On the other hand, the area also bears rich Ordovician limestone with which the local habitants make lime. It is by quarrying the limestone that local habitants find, in some fissures, the so-called Dragon Bones, which scientists call fossils. Within the research framework of the laboratory, Father Teilhard de Chardin, an eminent French paleontologist, and C. C. Young studied the fossiliferous deposits at Zhoukoudian and divided them into 10 layers in 1929. And the most important discovery of all was made on the 2nd of December in 1929. It was in a branching cave where a fissure crosses the main cave that Pei found the first and almost plete skullcap of Peking man in the red sandy clay, which is equivalent to the 10th layer in the main section. The discovery attracted great attention from scientific circles. The two human-like teeth found before were not enough to convince everyone that they belong to Peking Man, but the skullcap gave more anatomical proof and was much more convincing. An important Paleolithic site, this site was first excavated in 1927, in a cave on Dragon Bone Hill at Zhoukoudian, southwest of Beijing. In 1929, skull fossils of Peking man were discovered here, providing concrete evidence for the existence of primitive man in the Beijing area and marking a mile-stone in the history of paleo-anthropology. So far, a total of 6 skulls, 15 pieces of lower jaw-bones, 157 teeth and numerous other bone segments from the bodies of about 40 humans have been excavated, providing concrete data for the study of the evolution of pre-historic biology and the development of pre-historic culture. The study of geological strata indicated that Peking man lived about 700, 000 to 200,000 years ago. The average brain volume of these people was 1,088 ml (the average for modern people is 1,400 ml). And it is estimated that their average height reached 156 cm for males and 150 cm for females. Peking Man was among the first human beings to learn how to use fire, and could hunt large animals. Their average life expectancy was short; it is estimated that 68.2% of them died by the age of 14, and only 4.5% lived up to 50 years. Fossils of primitive men living 20,000 years ago were excavated in 1930 near the top of Dragon Bone Hill, and were named Upper Cave Man fossils. In 1973, fossils of New Cave Man were discovered. New Cave Man was believed to have lived in the period between Peking man and Upper cave Man, suggesting a continuity of development. Unmasking Sanxingdui Ruins Some 100 years ago, Sanxingdui in today’s Sichuan Province hadn’t seemed to anyone anything more than a typical rural area, and just 20 years ago its significance was not fully known. But when a farmer hollowing out a just-dug ditch in 1929 found some jade he unwittingly opened the door on an unknown culture between 3,000 to 5,000 years old. Perhaps it’s not so startling in itself that an accidental strike of the hoe would unearth ruins as new archeological sites from China’s rich history are being discovered almost every day. But what no one could have expected was that this particular discovery would rewrite Chinese history by unearthing a culture contemporary with the first civilizations of China but that had left no clues in historical records, that seemingly disappeared without a trace and which left artifacts never before discovered elsewhere in China. The discovery of the jade, which the family thought to keep secret at first, later brought archeologists, though one of them have predicted in the 1930s that this might be the capital of the ancient Shu kingdom, they still might have been startled by another accidental discovery by workers at a brick factory in 1986. Two sacrificial pits were filled with gold masks, bronze wares, jade tablets, elephant tusks and sacred trees — and they opened a world of mystery. The discovery pushed back the date of the bronzeage in China and yet the objects made were unlike any made in any other period of Chinese civilization with the creation of human-like figures and faces particularly unique. They left experts asking what the purpose of the objects was, where the culture came from, why there was no mention of it in historical texts and how such an ancient culture, at the origin of Chinese civilization, could be so advanced. Theories abound, but whatever the answer, the unique part-human, part-animal masks have bee the symbol of Sanxingdui and of the mysterious culture. So recently the local government invited some foreign journalists to participate in the opening of the Sanxingdui International Mask Festival at the start of the May Day holiday. The area whose name means “three-star mounds” in English is not a place foreigners who aren’t archeologists would know to visit and little is left for the mon person to see of the actual ruins but some ancient objects and many reproductions showing off this advanced culture are on display in the local museum. The more we learned about the mystery behind what was dug up, the more intriguing and important this site seemed. Many objects at first seem somewhat monplace for old cultures until you realize that the people making these objects were those living at the beginning of Chinese civilization. It is believed that Sanxingdui was capital of the ancient “Shu culture” of the Sichuan area, previously believed to be 3,000 years old. A metropolis of its time, covering about three square kilometers, Sanxingdui had highly developed agriculture, including wine-making ability, ceramic technology and sacrificial tools and mining was monplace. This discovery enables an overall picture of early society, which have diverse origins in China, and perhaps somewhat a rethink of just how “primitive” a primitive culture is. It’s not too late to visit the Sanxingdui International Mask Festival and these ancient ruins, fast being one of the top-promoted tourist sites in China. The festival is being held near Guanghan, only some 40 kilometers from Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province, already a popular destination for those wishing to see the giant panda or Sichuan’s beautiful spots. According to local officials, the festival lasts for 300 days from May 1.- 1.請(qǐng)仔細(xì)閱讀文檔,確保文檔完整性,對(duì)于不預(yù)覽、不比對(duì)內(nèi)容而直接下載帶來(lái)的問(wèn)題本站不予受理。
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- 2019-2020年高中英語(yǔ) Unit5第6課時(shí)文化背景知識(shí)教案 新人教版選修8 2019 2020 年高 英語(yǔ) Unit5 課時(shí) 文化背景 知識(shí) 教案 新人 選修
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