I. picture 1= careful with lost girls without wallets.
II. picture 2 = you have to keep dogs on the collar at all times.
III. picture 3 = you can sell it.
IV. picture 4 = you ought to keep off.
V. picture 5 = blind alley street.
Mark the correct alternative according to the meanings from the pictures above.
Archaeologists use drones to study Peru's ruins
[1] To get a bird's-eye view of ancient sites, archaeologists often turn to planes, helicopters
and even hot air balloons. But today researchers have access to more agile and less
expensive technology to map, explore and protect archaeological treasures: tiny
airborne drones.
[5] In Peru – the home of Machu Picchu and other amazing ruins – the government is
planning to purchase several drones to quickly and cheaply conduct archaeological
surveys in areas targeted for building or development, according to Reuters.
Archaeologists working in the country have already been using small flying robots to
study ancient sites, including the colonial Andean town Machu Llacta, and the San José
[10] de Moro burial grounds, which contain the tombs of Moche priestesses. Some
researchers have even built their own drones for less than $ 2,000, Reuters reported.
"It's like having a scalpel instead of a club," Jeffrey Quilter, an archaeologist at Harvard
University, told the news agency. "You can control it to a very fine degree. You can go
up 3 meters and photograph a room, 300 meters and photograph a site, or you can go
[15] up 3,000 meters and photograph the entire valley."
Cheap and effective drones could be a boon for Peru's culture ministry, which has a
modest budget and is tasked with protecting more than 13,000 archaeological sites that
are threatened by looters, squatters and illegal mining, according to Reuters.
Elsewhere robots have enabled archaeological discovery. A remote-controlled robot the
[20] size of a lawn mower recently found burial chambers inside the Temple of the Feathered
Serpent, an ancient pyramid in Mexico. And in Russia, researchers used a miniature
airborne drone to capture images that could be used to create a 3-D model of an ancient
burial mound.
www.foxnews.com/tech/2013.
Accessed on: 26/08/2013.
Mark the correct alternative which represents the right information about words.
I. “enabled” (line 19) = allow, verb
II. “lawn mower” (line 20) = a machine for cutting grass, noun
III. “site” (line 14) = a spot, noun
IV. “ancient” (line 9) = up to date, verb
V. “quickly” (line 6) = haltingly, adjective
Archaeologists use drones to study Peru's ruins
[1] To get a bird's-eye view of ancient sites, archaeologists often turn to planes, helicopters
and even hot air balloons. But today researchers have access to more agile and less
expensive technology to map, explore and protect archaeological treasures: tiny
airborne drones.
[5] In Peru – the home of Machu Picchu and other amazing ruins – the government is
planning to purchase several drones to quickly and cheaply conduct archaeological
surveys in areas targeted for building or development, according to Reuters.
Archaeologists working in the country have already been using small flying robots to
study ancient sites, including the colonial Andean town Machu Llacta, and the San José
[10] de Moro burial grounds, which contain the tombs of Moche priestesses. Some
researchers have even built their own drones for less than $ 2,000, Reuters reported.
"It's like having a scalpel instead of a club," Jeffrey Quilter, an archaeologist at Harvard
University, told the news agency. "You can control it to a very fine degree. You can go
up 3 meters and photograph a room, 300 meters and photograph a site, or you can go
[15] up 3,000 meters and photograph the entire valley."
Cheap and effective drones could be a boon for Peru's culture ministry, which has a
modest budget and is tasked with protecting more than 13,000 archaeological sites that
are threatened by looters, squatters and illegal mining, according to Reuters.
Elsewhere robots have enabled archaeological discovery. A remote-controlled robot the
[20] size of a lawn mower recently found burial chambers inside the Temple of the Feathered
Serpent, an ancient pyramid in Mexico. And in Russia, researchers used a miniature
airborne drone to capture images that could be used to create a 3-D model of an ancient
burial mound.
www.foxnews.com/tech/2013.
Accessed on: 26/08/2013.
The text says:
Archaeologists use drones to study Peru's ruins
[1] To get a bird's-eye view of ancient sites, archaeologists often turn to planes, helicopters
and even hot air balloons. But today researchers have access to more agile and less
expensive technology to map, explore and protect archaeological treasures: tiny
airborne drones.
[5] In Peru – the home of Machu Picchu and other amazing ruins – the government is
planning to purchase several drones to quickly and cheaply conduct archaeological
surveys in areas targeted for building or development, according to Reuters.
Archaeologists working in the country have already been using small flying robots to
study ancient sites, including the colonial Andean town Machu Llacta, and the San José
[10] de Moro burial grounds, which contain the tombs of Moche priestesses. Some
researchers have even built their own drones for less than $ 2,000, Reuters reported.
"It's like having a scalpel instead of a club," Jeffrey Quilter, an archaeologist at Harvard
University, told the news agency. "You can control it to a very fine degree. You can go
up 3 meters and photograph a room, 300 meters and photograph a site, or you can go
[15] up 3,000 meters and photograph the entire valley."
Cheap and effective drones could be a boon for Peru's culture ministry, which has a
modest budget and is tasked with protecting more than 13,000 archaeological sites that
are threatened by looters, squatters and illegal mining, according to Reuters.
Elsewhere robots have enabled archaeological discovery. A remote-controlled robot the
[20] size of a lawn mower recently found burial chambers inside the Temple of the Feathered
Serpent, an ancient pyramid in Mexico. And in Russia, researchers used a miniature
airborne drone to capture images that could be used to create a 3-D model of an ancient
burial mound.
www.foxnews.com/tech/2013.
Accessed on: 26/08/2013.
Some of the English grammar points which are present in line 16 are:
Archaeologists use drones to study Peru's ruins
[1] To get a bird's-eye view of ancient sites, archaeologists often turn to planes, helicopters
and even hot air balloons. But today researchers have access to more agile and less
expensive technology to map, explore and protect archaeological treasures: tiny
airborne drones.
[5] In Peru – the home of Machu Picchu and other amazing ruins – the government is
planning to purchase several drones to quickly and cheaply conduct archaeological
surveys in areas targeted for building or development, according to Reuters.
Archaeologists working in the country have already been using small flying robots to
study ancient sites, including the colonial Andean town Machu Llacta, and the San José
[10] de Moro burial grounds, which contain the tombs of Moche priestesses. Some
researchers have even built their own drones for less than $ 2,000, Reuters reported.
"It's like having a scalpel instead of a club," Jeffrey Quilter, an archaeologist at Harvard
University, told the news agency. "You can control it to a very fine degree. You can go
up 3 meters and photograph a room, 300 meters and photograph a site, or you can go
[15] up 3,000 meters and photograph the entire valley."
Cheap and effective drones could be a boon for Peru's culture ministry, which has a
modest budget and is tasked with protecting more than 13,000 archaeological sites that
are threatened by looters, squatters and illegal mining, according to Reuters.
Elsewhere robots have enabled archaeological discovery. A remote-controlled robot the
[20] size of a lawn mower recently found burial chambers inside the Temple of the Feathered
Serpent, an ancient pyramid in Mexico. And in Russia, researchers used a miniature
airborne drone to capture images that could be used to create a 3-D model of an ancient
burial mound.
www.foxnews.com/tech/2013.
Accessed on: 26/08/2013.
The text says:
Sign nº 1 means: