Ielts Master: The Development of Travel Under The Ocean
Ielts Master: The Development of Travel Under The Ocean
Ielts Master: The Development of Travel Under The Ocean
For millennia, humans have been intrigued by what lies beneath the sea and although submarine travel was
attempted from time to time, it did not become commonplace until the middle of last century. Several clever
and innovative people had experimented with designs for submersible boats before then, but there was much
loss of life and little success.
There had long been use of a primitive diving bell for explorative purposes, but it was as a war machine that
the submarine came into its own. The first development in the history of American submarines was a small
submersible with a hand-cranked screw-like oar and a crew of one. It was built before the American
Revolutionary War (1775—1783) but was adapted for use against the British during this war. Although its pilot
twice failed to fasten explosive devices to British ships before losing control of his vessel, he escaped harm.
In 1800, an American inventor, Robert Fulton, designed an underwater machine that he called the Nautilus.
This version brought in features that can still be found in some modern submarines, notably adjustable diving
planes for better underwater manoeuvring, dual systems of propulsion, and a compressed air system that
allowed it to stay down for about four hours without surfacing.
Development of submersible vessels lagged a long way behind the continued progress in the design of surface
ships until the American Civil War (1861-1865) when both sides tried out various designs. One of those, called
the Hunley — named after its financier rather than its inventor, sank twice during training missions with 11
crew members losing their lives including Hunley himself. Notwithstanding these failures, it was commissioned
again in 1864 to attack a ship in Charleston Harbor. A torpedo was used to strike and scuttle the ship – a first
in naval history, but the submarine never reappeared, and once again the whole crew perished. Its potential
had been recognised, but there still remained the challenge of operating safely under the water.
The US Navy could appreciate the strategic benefits of having submarines in its fleet and held a competition to
encourage design and construction of these underwater craft. The inventor, John Holland, won the competition
and it was his sixth prototype, the Holland, that the navy bought and added to its fleet in 1900. This submarine
was quite different from previous designs. It was propelled by a gasoline engine that turned a propeller while
the vessel was on the surface. When it submerged, the engine ran a generator to charge batteries to operate
an electric motor. The improved propulsion methods were, unfortunately, highly dangerous. Not only is
gasoline flammable and unstable, using it in the restricted environment of a submarine posed quite a hazard for
the crewmen. There was another problem, too: the batteries were not only heavy, cumbersome and inefficient,
but they were also extremely volatile.
During the same period as Holland’s efforts were being trialled, a German scientist by the name of Rudolf Diesel
created an engine which used a fuel less explosive than gasoline and which could consequently be stored
safely. Another advantage was that there was no necessity for an electric spark to ignite the fuel. These safety
improvements combined with better fuel economy allowed Diesel engines to power a submarine for longer on
the surface; however, batteries were still needed to supply energy for underwater operation.
Although diesel-powered submarines were successful and used by the US Navy for almost 50 years, the search
for a single power source carried on. It wasn’t long before the concept of nuclear power was realised in
Germany and taken up by an American physicist, Ross Gunn, who could envisage its potential in submersibles.
A research team was put together to adapt the concept of nuclear power for use in submarines. In effect,
modem nuclear submarines have on board a small nuclear power plant which produces a great amount of
energy. This is used to heat water and create steam which drives a huge turbine which turns the propeller.
There have been many adaptations and technological improvements made to submarines over the years, but
the shape is basically the same. Obviously, it is a totally enclosed craft, cigar-shaped with narrowed ends. The
outer hull is the largest part of the boat and forms the body. The inner hull is designed to resist the
considerable water pressure and insulates the crew from the cold. This is where the crew works, eats and
sleeps. It also contains
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
the engine room and the apparatus that makes clean air and clean water. Between the hulls are the ballast
tanks for controlling buoyancy. There is a tall fin-shaped sail that comes up out of the hull. Inside the sail is the
conning tower and extending from this, to the fore, there is a periscope (through which the captain can see the
sea and sky when the submarine is near the surface of the water). Sonar is used for navigation deep below the
surface. The other projection from the conning tower is the radio antenna.
Underwater, there are two controls for steering the submarine. The rudder (like a tail fin) controls side-to-side
movement, and diving planes influence rise and descent. There are two sets of diving planes: the forward sail
planes and the stem planes, which are located at the back with the rudder and propeller.
Advancing technology will undoubtedly result in different shapes and modes of operation, and it is quite
possible that, in the future, submarines will be manned by robots or computer technology that communicates
information to land bases via satellite.
Questions 1-6
Answer the questions below. Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text for each answer.
1. What kind of underwater device was used to investigate the ocean before submersible boats were invented?
2. What was the crewman of the first American-built submarine trying to do before his mission failed?
3. What gave the Nautilus the ability to remain submerged for a long time?
5. What new type of propulsion did the Holland use on top of the water?
6. For what reason was Diesel’s fuel considered safer than Holland’s?
Questions 7—13
Label the diagram below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the text for each answer.
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
Vitamins - To supplement or not?
Mineral, vitamin, and antioxidant health supplements make up a multi-billion-dollar industry in the United States
alone, but do they really work? Evidence suggests supplementation is clearly indicated in special circumstances,
but can actually be harmful in others. For the general population, however, supplements have negligible or no
impact on the prevention of common cancers, cardiovascular diseases, cognitive decline, mortality, or any other
major indicators of health. In pursuit of a longer, happier and healthier life, there are certainly better
investments for most people than a tube of vitamin supplements.
Particular sub-groups of the population can gain a proven benefit from supplementation. Folic acid has long
been indicated as a prenatal supplement due to its assistance in foetal cell division and corresponding ability to
prevent neural tube birth defects. Since Canada and the United States decided to require white flour to be
fortified with folic acid, spinal birth defects have plummeted by 75%, and rates of neuroblastoma (a ravaging
form of infant cancer) are now 50% lower. In countries without such fortification, or for women on low-
carbohydrate diets, a prenatal multivitamin could make the crucial difference. The United States Department of
Health and Human Services has concluded that the elderly may also benefit from extra vitamin D; calcium can
help prevent bone fractures; and zinc and antioxidants can maintain vision while deflecting macular
degeneration in people who would otherwise be likely to develop this affliction.
There is mounting evidence, however, for many people to steer clear of multivitamins. The National Institutes
of Health has noted a “disturbing evidence of risk” in tobacco users: beta-carotene, a common ingredient in
multivitamins, was found over a six-year study to significantly contribute to higher lung cancer and mortality
rates in smokers. Meanwhile, excessive vitamin A (a supplement often taken to boost the immune system) has
been proven to increase women’s risk of a hip fracture, and vitamin E, thought to improve cardiovascular
health, was contraindicated in a study that demonstrated higher rates of congestive heart failure among such
vitamin users. Antioxidant supplementation has no purpose nor does it achieve anything, according to the Food
and Nutrition Board of the National Academy of Sciences, and the Medical Letter Group has gone further in
suggesting they may interfere with treatment and promote some cancers. Antioxidants are generally regarded
as counteracting the destructive effect of free radicals in the body, but according to the Medical Letter’s theory,
free radicals may also serve the purpose of sending a powerful signal to the body’s immune system to fix the
damage. By taking supplements, we risk undermining that message and upsetting the balance of antioxidants
and free radicals in the body. The supplements counteract the free radicals, the immune system is not placed
on alert, and the disease could sneak through the gates.
One problem with supplementation by tablet is the poor record on digestibility. These tablets are often stocked
with metal-based minerals that are essentially miniature rocks, and our bodies are unable to digest them. Even
the vitamin elements of these pills that are theoretically digestible are often unable to be effectively extracted
by our bodies when they arrive in such a condensed form. In Salt Lake City, for example, over 150 gallons of
vitamin and mineral pills are retrieved from the sewer filters each month. According to the physician’s desk
reference, only about 10% – 20% of multivitamins are absorbed by the body. The National Advisory Board is
even more damning, suggesting that every 100mg of tablet corresponds to about 8.3mg of blood
concentration, although noting that this can still potentially perform a helpful role in some cases. In effect, for
every $100 you spend on vitamin supplements, over $90 of that is quite literally flushed down the toilet.
A final argument against multivitamins is the notion that they can lead people – consciously or not – to the
conclusion that supplementation fills in the gaps of an unhealthy diet and mops up afterwards, leaving their
bodies none the wiser that instead of preparing a breakfast of fresh fruit and muesli, they popped a tiny
capsule with coffee and a chocolate bar. In a seven-year study, however, the Heart Protection study did not
find any positive outcome whatsoever from multivitamins and concluded that while vitamins in the diet are
important, multivitamin tablets are safe but completely useless. There is evidently no shortcut around the task
of buying, preparing, and consuming fresh fruit and vegetables every day. Boosting, supplementing, and
fortifying products
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
alter people’s very perception of what healthy food is; instead of heading for the fresh produce aisle in the
supermarket, they are likely to seek out sugary, processed foods with a handful of extra B vitamins as a healthy
choice. We cannot supplement our way out of a bad diet.
Questions 14-16
Choose, the correct letter, A. B, C, or D.
Questions 17-21
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
Questions 22-26
Classify the following groups of people according to whether they believe
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
The Birth of Suburbia
A. There is no single pivotal moment that could be separated out from any other as the conception of the
suburban lifestyle; from the early 1800s, various types of suburban development have sprung up and evolved
in their own localised ways, from the streetcar suburbs of New York to the dormitory towns outside of London.
It is William Levitt, however, who is generally regarded as the father of modem suburbia. During World War II,
Levitt served in the United States Navy where he developed expertise in the mass construction of military
housing, a process that he streamlined using uniform and interchangeable parts. In 1947, the budding
developer used this utilitarian knowledge to begin work with his father and architect brother constructing a
planned community on Long Island, New York. With an emphasis on speed, efficiency, and cost-effective
production, the Levitts were soon able to produce over 30 units a day.
B. William Levitt correctly predicted the demand for affordable, private, quiet, and comfortable homes from
returning GIs after World War II and with the baby boom starting to kick in. All the original lots sold out in a
matter of days, and by 1951, nearly 18,000 homes in the area had been constructed by the Levitt fit Sons
Company. Levittown quickly became the prototype of mass- produced housing, spurring the construction of
similar projects in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and even Puerto Rico, followed by a new industry, and soon a
new way of life and a new ideal for the American family.
C. One of the major criticisms of suburbia is that it can lead to isolation and social dislocation. With properties
spread out over great swathes of land, sealed off from one another by bushes, fences and trees, the emphasis
of suburban life is placed squarely on privacy rather than community. In the densely populated urban
settlements that predated suburbs (and that are still the predominant way of life for some people), activities
such as childcare and household chores as well as sources of emotional and moral support were widely
socialised. This insured that any one family would be able to draw on a pool of social resources from their
neighbours, building cohabitants and family on nearby streets. Suburbia breaks these networks down into
individual and nuclear family units resulting in an increase in anti-social behaviour even amongst the wealthy.
Teens from wealthy suburban families, for example, are more likely to smoke, drink alcohol, and use drugs
than their poorer urban peers, and are also more likely to experience depression and anxiety.
D. Another major problem with the suburban lifestyle is its damaging ecological impact. The comparison of
leafy, quiet, and low-density suburbs with life in the concrete towers of sooty, congested urban conurbations is
actually quite misleading; as it turns out, if you want to be kind to the natural environment, the key is to stay
away from it. Suburbia fails the environmental friendliness test on a number of counts. Firstly, due to their low
population density, suburbs consume natural land at a much higher rate than high-density row housing or
apartment buildings. Secondly, they encourage the use of personal motor vehicles, often at a rate of one per
family member, at the expense of public transport. It is also much less efficient to provide electricity and water
to individual suburban houses instead of individual units in an apartment building. In his comparison of urban
and suburban pollution, Edward L. Glaeser concluded that we need to “build more sky towers – especially in
California”. Virtually everywhere, he found cities to be cleaner than suburbs. And the difference in carbon
dioxide emissions between high-density cities and their suburbs (for example, in New York) was the highest.
Urban residents of New York can claim on average to produce nearly 15,000 pounds of carbon dioxide less than
their suburban peers.
E. Another negative aspect of suburban life is its stifling conformity and monotony of social experience. It was
not just the nuts and bolts and the concrete foundations of suburban houses that got replicated street upon
street, block upon block, and suburb upon suburb; it was everything from the shops and cultural life to people’s
hopes, dreams, and aspirations. Suburbia gave birth to the “strip mall”, a retail establishment that is typically
composed of a collection of national or global chain stores, all stocked with a centrally dictated, homogenous
array of products. The isolation and lack of interaction in suburbs has also encouraged the popularity of
television, a passively receptive medium for the viewer that, in the early days at least, offered an extremely
limited scope of cultural exposure compared with the wealth of experiences available in the inner city.
Meanwhile, much of the
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd
IELTS MASTER
inner-city “public sphere” has been lost with suburban flight. The public sphere is the area of social life in which
people come together to freely discuss and identify social problems. In the city, this has traditionally occurred
around newsstands, in coffee houses, salons, theatres, meeting halls, and so on. Suburbia has not found a way
to replace this special type of social experience, however. Social meeting points in the suburbs tend to be based
exclusively around specific interests such as sports or cultural clubs, with no broad forms of daily social
interaction.
F. These points do not suggest the idea of suburbia itself is flawed, but that it has not been executed in a way
that takes into account the full spectrum of human needs and desires. This likely reflects the hasty, thrown-
together nature of early suburban development. With the baby boom rippling across Western countries and
demand for family-friendly housing skyrocketing, developers and city planners were unable to develop
sophisticated models. Now, however, we should take time to consider what has gone wrong and how we can
reconfigure the suburb. How can we imbue suburban life with the lost sphere of public discussion and debate?
How can people maintain their sought after privacy without sacrificing a sense of community? How can we use
new technologies to make suburbs environmentally friendly? These are questions for which the developers of
tomorrow will have to find answers, lest the dream of suburbia become the nightmare of disturbia.
Questions 27-31
Reading Passage 3 has six paragraphs, A-F. Which paragraph contains the following information?
Questions 32-38
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?
Questions 39-40
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
IELTS MASTER – The best guide for IELTS aspirants to understand the pattern of IELTS and its 4 modules. Learn the
basics
and advanced tricks for all modules and how to attempt different types of questions to achieve the maximum band
score. For largest and latest collection of IELTS practice test visit our official website www.practicepteonline.com/ielts-
material/ and for tutorials and lessons on how to score 8 BANDS in IELTS subscribe to official YouTube channel
www.youtube.com/englishwithd