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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
I have the greatest job in the world. I travel to unusual places and work alongside1 people from all over the world. Sometimes working outdoors, sometimes in an office, sometimes using scientific equipment and sometimes meeting local people and tourists, I am never bored.
Although my job is occasionally2 dangerous, I don't mind because danger excites me and makes me feel alive. However, the most important thing about my job is that I help protect ordinary people from one of the most powerful forces on earth - the volcano3.
I was appointed as a volcanologist working for the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory4 (HVO) twenty years ago. My job is collecting information for a database5 about Mount6 Kilauea, which is one of the most active volcanoes7 in Hawaii. Having collected and evaluated the information, I help other scientists to predict where lava8 from the volcano will flow next and how fast. Our work has saved many lives because people in the path of the lava can be warned to leave their houses. Unfortunately, we cannot move their homes out of the way, and many houses have been covered with lava or burned to the ground.
When boiling rock erupts from a volcano and crashes back to earth, it causes less damage than you might imagine. This is because no one lives near the top of Mount Kilauea, where the rocks fall. The lava that flows slowly like a wave down the mountain causes far more damage because it buries everything in its path under the molten rock. However, the eruption9 itself is really exciting to watch and I shall never forget my first sight of one. It was in the second week after I arrived in Hawaii. Having worked hard all day, I went to bed early. I was fast asleep when suddenly my bed began shaking and I heard a strange sound, like a railway train passing my window. Having experienced10 quite a few earthquakes in Hawaii already, I didn't take much notice. I was about to go back to sleep when suddenly my bedroom became as bright as day. I ran out of the house into the back garden where I could see Mount Kilauea in the distance. There had been an eruption from the side of the mountain and red hot lava was fountaining hundreds of metres into the air. It was an absolutely fantastic sight.
The day after this eruption I was lucky enough to have a much closer look at it. Two other scientists and I were driven up the mountain and dropped as close as possible to the crater11 that had been formed during the eruption. Having earlier collected special clothes from the observatory, we put them on before we went any closer. All three of us looked like spacemen.We had white protective12 suits that covered our whole body, helmets, big boots and special gloves. It was not easy to walk in these suits, but we slowly made our way to the edge of the crater and looked down into the red, boiling centre. The other two climbed down into the crater to collect some lava for later study, but this being my first experience, I stayed at the top and watched them.
Today, I am just as enthusiastic about my job as the day I first started. Having studied volcanoes now for many years, I am still amazed13 at their beauty as well as their potential to cause great damage.
1 alongside | |
adv.在旁边;prep.和...在一起,在...旁边 | |
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2 occasionally | |
adv.偶然地;非经常地 | |
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3 volcano | |
n.火山 | |
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4 observatory | |
n.天文台,气象台,瞭望台,观测台 | |
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5 database | |
n.数据库 (=databank) | |
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6 mount | |
n.山峰,乘用马,框,衬纸;vi.增长,骑上(马);vt.提升,爬上,装备 | |
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7 volcanoes | |
n.火山( volcano的名词复数 ) | |
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8 lava | |
n.熔岩,火山岩 | |
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9 eruption | |
n.火山爆发;(战争等)爆发;(疾病等)发作 | |
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10 experienced | |
adj.有经验的;经验丰富的,熟练的 | |
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11 crater | |
n.火山口,弹坑 | |
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12 protective | |
adj.防护的,保护的 | |
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13 amazed | |
adj.吃惊的,惊奇的v.使大为吃惊,使惊奇( amaze的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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