Practice Questions 1–10
The Alaska pipeline starts at the frozen edge of the
Arctic Ocean. It stretches southward across the largest
and northernmost state in the United States, ending at
a remote ice-free seaport village nearly 800 miles from
where it begins. It is massive in size and extremely
complicated to operate.
The steel pipe crosses windswept
plains and endless miles of delicate tundra that tops
the frozen ground. It weaves through crooked canyons,
climbs sheer mountains, plunges over rocky crags,
makes its way through thick forests, and passes over or
under hundreds of rivers and streams. The pipe is 4 feet in
diameter, and up to 2 million barrels (or 84 million
gallons) of crude oil can be pumped through it daily.
Resting on H-shaped steel racks called "bents,"
long
sections of the pipeline follow a zigzag course high
above the frozen earth. Other long sections drop out of
sight beneath spongy or rocky ground and return to the
surface later on. The pattern of the pipeline's up-and-
down route is determined by the often harsh demands
of the arctic and subarctic climate, the tortuous lay of
the land, and the varied compositions of soil, rock, or
permafrost (permanently frozen ground). A little more
than half of the pipeline is elevated above the ground.
The remainder is buried anywhere from 3 to 12 feet,
depending largely upon the type of terrain and the
properties of the soil.
One of the largest in the world, the pipeline cost
approximately $8 billion and is by far the biggest
and most expensive construction project ever
undertaken by private industry. In fact, no single
business could raise that much money, so eight major oil
companies formed a consortium in order to share
the costs. Each company controlled oil rights to
particular shares of land in the oil fields and paid
into the pipeline-construction fund according to the
size of its holdings. Today, despite enormous
problems of climate, supply shortages, equipment
breakdowns, labor disagreements, treacherous
terrain, a certain amount of mismanagement, and
even theft, the Alaska pipeline has been completed
and is operating.
- The passage primarily discusses the pipeline's
- A. operating costs
- B. employees
- C. consumers
- D. construction
- The word "it" in line 5 refers to the
- A. pipeline
- B. ocean
- C. state
- D. village
- According to the second paragraph, 84 million gallons of oil can travel through the pipeline each
- A. day
- B. week
- C. month
- D. year
- The phrase "Resting on" in line 15 is closest in meaning to
- A. Consisting of
- B. Supported by
- C. Passing under
- D. Protected with
- The author mentions all of the following in the third paragraph as important in determining the pipeline's route EXCEPT the
- A. climate
- B. lay of the land itself
- C. local vegetation
- D. kind of soil and rock
- The word "undertaken" in line 31 is closest in meaning to
- A. removed
- B. selected
- C. transported
- D. attempted
- According to the last paragraph, how many companies shared the costs of constructing the pipeline?
- A. three
- B. four
- C. eight
- D. twelve
- The word "particular" in line 35 is closest in meaning to
- A. peculiar
- B. specific
- C. exceptional
- D. equal
- According to the last paragraph, which of the following determined what percentage of the construction costs each member of the consortium would pay?
- A. How much oil field land each company owned
- B. How long each company had owned land in the oil fields
- C. How many people worked for each company
- D. How many oil wells were located on the company's land
- Where in the passage does the author provide a term for a layer of soil that always remains frozen?
- A. Line 4
- B. Line 15
- C. Line 23
- D. Line 37
Source : https://www.ets.org/toefl_itp/content/sample_questions/level1_section3_reading_comprehension