GL - Year 7
GL - Year 7
GL - Year 7
jjjjjActivity 1
In the passage below there are some mistakes in the use of punctuation. On each
line there is one mistake. Find the mistake and highlight it by clicking on it with
the mouse. It may help you to read through the whole passage first.
Here is an example:
The mistake is highlighted because this, sentence has an incorrect comma in the
middle of it For this line, the mistake is highlighted because a full stop is missing
after 'it'.
Stars
Have you come across a star 'eating' a planet? It's not as strange as it sounds.
Astronomers think they know what has happened. The theory they've put forward is
that, as the ageing star expanded, the planet was destroyed. Scientists careful study of
the star, which is one of a class of stars known, as red giants, led to the discovery.
Rising core temperatures cause red giants to expand in size a process that will destroy
any nearby planets. According to professor Alexander Wolszczan, "A similar fate may
await the planets in our solar system some five billion years from now" So not
Activity 2
In the exercise below, you have to choose the best word to complete each sentence
or passage so that it makes sense and is written in correct English. Choose one of
the five answer options.
The first piece of evidence for the (1)____________ planet came from the star's
peculiar chemical composition.
The astronomers’ second piece of evidence was the highly elongated orbit that a
(4)____________discovered planet was tracing around the red giant star. These types
of orbits are uncommon in planetary systems around stars such as our Sun.
Q1
zzQ2
Q3
Q4
Q6
on an in at by
Q7
Q8
Activity 3
________________.
The earliest castles were motte and bailey, with a wooden fort on top of a
mound (the motte) and an ______________ area that was large enough to
(the bailey). The Normans were keen to build as many castles as possible,
complicated and much stronger, with several walled areas inside one
Activity 4
The two newspaper articles on the following pages describe the mystery surrounding
the exact position of the find and the excitement generated when the treasure was put
on display in a local museum.
The secret location where the multi-million pound Staffordshire Hoard was
unearthed!
Following the initial find, newspapers largely followed archaeologists' requests not to
publish the exact position of the field where metal detector fan Terry Herbert found
the exquisite Anglo-Saxon collection, fearing the site could be targeted by thieves.
Archaeologists were concerned that if the site was made widely known, 'night-
hawkers' would arrive in droves with metal detectors.
than £3 million.
swords).
kingdom of Mercia.
97 together is unprecedented.'
Mr Herbert described to journalists how uncovering the hoard was an exhilarating but
alarming experience. "Digging the objects up was like having a burst pipe. When you
repaired one burst, it started going in other places and it would not stop, he said.
"Afterwards, I was having weird dreams and all I could see as soon as I shut my eyes
was pieces of gold with garnets in." It was when Herbert's whole dining table became
covered in gold that he decided to call in the experts and ask for their help. Now that
those experts are confident that all the treasure has been safely removed from the site
and there is no longer any reason for any illegal treasure hunters to come snooping on
The hoard was found on a hilltop on farmland outside Lichfield. The land is bordered
on three sides by busy roads, one of which turns out to be the Roman road Watling
Street. This suggests that whoever hid the gold and silver treasure there, for whatever
reason, may have planned for a quick getaway, perhaps indicating they were up to no
good.
After 1,300 years in the ground, the biggest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold is to be put on
display at the Potteries Museum in Stoke-on-Trent, not 30 miles from the field where
the treasure was found. The glittering treasure has sparked intense local interest and
pride in the county that hid it for all those years. Many objects, including a gold horse,
as intricate as a piece of lace and no bigger than a postage stamp, have never been
seen before.
The same reddish Mercian clay that made Stoke world famous as the heart of the
potteries industry and formed over a tonne of Saxon pots in the museum's collections,
is clinging to the curves and crevices of the many pieces of gem-studded gold on
display. One still has blades of grass that grew up through it in the newly ploughed
field. "And there could be blood on them as well. These pieces still have a lot to tell
that they were investigating a murder. Ther e may well have been a murder, or several
Unlike the coins and women's jewellery usually found at archaeological sites, these
pieces reek of battle and a macho warrior culture. They include scores of decorations
from swords, helmets and shields, fierce little golden animals biting their own tails
and legs, and slender golden crosses wrenched from their original mounts and folded
"It's warrior booty," Klemperer said. It tells the story of the kings and warriors, who
carried these pieces into battle, who then fell and were stripped of their precious
trinkets and possessions. The historian David Starkey, memorably described the hoard
as gangland bling'
- Was the treasure collected after one battle or was it accumulated over several
battles?
Historians may one day be able to shed some more light on this amazing discovery.
Until then..
Choose one.
__________________________________________________________________
3. Why does the writer tell the reader the weight of gold and silver, and the number of
Choose one.
secret from:
Choose one.
a) archaeologists
b) journalists
c) treasure hunters
d) experts
5. Why has the writer used inverted commas around the term 'night-hawkers’?
Choose one.
a) because it is a quotation
Mr Herbert found the experience of finding the treasure alarming. Why was this?
Choose two.
7. What is the main reason the location of the site has now been revealed?
Choose one.
c) because the archaeologists need help to find the rest of the Hoard
What does this phrase emphasise about the object shaped like a gold horse?
_____________________________________________________________________
Choose one.
Choose one.
Choose one.
It contained only …
b) precious trinkets.
c) golden crosses.
d) warrior booty.
__________________________________________________________