Elephant communication reading answers

  1. General IELTS Reading Test 30 Answers
  2. Questions 28
  3. Unforgettable Elephants
  4. IELTS MASTER
  5. IELTS Recent Actual Test 2021 With Answer Key
  6. Elephant Communication
  7. Elephant Communication: Sample IELTS Reading Answers


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General IELTS Reading Test 30 Answers

Dear students, here are the IELTSFever General IELTS Reading Practice Test 30 Answers (Pubs of England, Pigeons, collection of advertisements, Equipment Used In Gymnasiums, Elephant communication ) Dear Students, if you need to clear your doubts regarding these Answers, you can ask any question throw our email, or you can mention your query in the comments section. or send your questions on our IELTSfever Facebook page or Tweet Us on #IELTSFever Also, you can join our Telegram channel, where you will get the latest IELTS Material General IELTS Reading Test answers 30 1 D 21 D 2 A 22 D 3 F 23 B 4 E 24 G 5 C 25 F 6 B 26 E 7 G 27 C 8 UNTAMED 28 HAMMER 9 BREED 29 BODY 10 SPORT 30 PAD 11 GAMBLING 31 CAVITIES/ SINUS CAVITIES 12 LINEAGE 32 TRUNKS AND FEET 13 PRIDE 33 INFRASONIC 14 SUPPORT 34 ECOLOGY 15 B 35 SEISMIC MESSAGES 16 G 36 ACOUSTIC COMMUNICATION / COMMUNICATIONS 17 E 37 MATE 18 F 38 GROUD 19 C 39 A 20 A 40 C Also, Read

Questions 28

• • • What is IELTS Listening Test? • Listening Tips & Tricks • Listening Mini Tests • Listening Practice Tests • • What is IELTS Reading Test? • Reading Tips & Tricks • Reading Mini Tests • Reading Practice Tests • • What is IELTS Writing Test? • Writing Tips & Tricks • Writing Mini Tests • Writing Practice Tests • • What is IELTS Speaking Test? • Speaking Tips & Tricks • Speaking Mini Tests • Speaking Practice Tests • • Academic Module • General Training Module • • Listening Section • Reading Section • Writing Section • Speaking Section • Search READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Elephant communication A. A postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, O’Connell-Rodwell has come to Namibia’s premiere wildlife sanctuary to explore the mysterious and complex world of elephant communication. She and her colleagues are part of a scientific revolution that began nearly two decades ago with the stunning revelation that elephants communicate over long distances using low-frequency sounds, also called infrasounds, that are too deep to be heard by most humans. B. As might be expected, the African elephant’s ability to sense seismic sound may begin in the ears. The hammer bone of the elephant’s inner ear is proportionally very large for a mammal, buy typical for animals that use vibrational signals. It may, therefore, be a sign that elephants can communicate with seismic sounds. [ C. But other aspects o...

Unforgettable Elephants

After years observing elephants in the wild, filmmaker Martyn Colbeck has learned how vast — and how mysterious — the realm of elephant communication is. Elephants rely on a complex communication system to sustain their clan-based society. At the root of it is a common language. Long-lived and large-brained, elephants are not only capable of expressing complex thoughts using this common language of intricate acoustics, they have a great deal of social and ecological knowledge to share. Elephants have a wide range of calls and signals for different purposes — to secure their defense, warn others of danger, coordinate group movements, reconcile differences, attract mates, reinforce family bonds, and announce their needs and desires. Researchers like Joyce Poole have been trying to crack the code of the elephant communication for years. Poole has found that the elephants use more than 70 kinds of vocal sounds and 160 different visual and tactile signals, expressions, and gestures in their day-to-day interactions. Vocal calls Vocal calls are likely the most common way elephants confer. Calls are used for everything from caring for calves, reconciling differences during disagreements and coordinating the group’s next move. At the end of a meal, when it’s time to move on, one member of a family moves to the edge of the group, typically lifts one leg and flaps her ears. She repeats a “let’s go” rumble, which eventually rouses the whole family, who then hit the road. An elephant c...

IELTS MASTER

ielts reading test 147 The Pearl A The pearl has always had a special status in the rich and powerful all through the history. For instance, women from ancient Rome went to bed with pearls on them, so that they could remind themselves how wealthy they were after waking up. Pearls used to have more commercial value than diamonds until jewellers learnt to cut gems. In the eastern countries like Persia, ground pearl powders could be used as a medicine to cure anything including heart diseases and epilepsy. B Pearls can generally be divided into three categories: natural, cultured and imitation. When an irritant (such as a grain of sand) gets. inside a certain type of oyster, mussel, or clam, the mollusc will secrete a fluid as a means of defence to coat the irritant. Gradually, layers are accumulated around the irritant until a lustrous natural pearl is formed. C A cultured pearl undergoes the same process. There is only one difference between cultured pearls and natural ones: in cultured pearls, the irritant is a head called ‘mother of pearl’ and is placed in the oyster through surgical implantation. This results in much larger cores in cultivated pearls than those in natural pearls. As long as there are enough layers of nacre (the secreted fluid covering the irritant) to create a gorgeous, gem-quality pearl; the size of the nucleus wouldn’t make a difference to beauty or durability. D Pearls can come from both salt and freshwater sources. Typically, pearls from salt water u...

IELTS Recent Actual Test 2021 With Answer Key

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Elephant Communication

Like all highly social mammals elephants have a well-developed system of communication that makes use of all of their senses - hearing, smell, vision and touch - including an exceptional ability to At one end of the spectrum elephants communicate by rubbing their bodies against one another, at the other end they may respond by moving toward the sounds of other elephants calling, perhaps 10 kilometers away. They convey information about their physiological (e.g. sexual/hormonal, body condition, identity) and emotional state (e.g. whether they are fearful, playful, joyful, angry, excited) as well as communicating specific "statements" about their intentions or desires. In this section we look at how elephants use the different pathways of communication and the actual mechanics of communicating. You will in the fully searchable database The Elephant Ethogram: A Library of African Elephant Behavior find close to 300 fully described elephant sounds with spectrograms, together with 2,400 educational video clips showing categorizedelephant behaviors and behavior constellations and hundreds of images. The below slideshow take you through a limited number of the over 400 Behaviors and Behavioral Constellations included in The Elephant Ethogram - click on any image to find further documentation.

Elephant Communication: Sample IELTS Reading Answers

The Also Read: Power from the Earth IELTS Reading Answers: IELTS Academic and General Reading Preparation IELTS Reading Answers Part One O’ Connell-Rodwell, a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, has travelled to Namibia’s first-ever wildlife reserve to explore the mystical and complicated realm of elephant communication. She, along with her colleagues, is part of a scientific revolution that started almost 20 years ago. This revolution has made a stunning revelation: elephants are capable of communicating with each other over long distances with low-frequency sounds, also known as infrasounds, which are too deep for humans to hear. As might be expected, African elephants’ ability to detect seismic sound may have something to do with their ears. The hammer bone in an elephant’s inner ear is proportionally huge for a mammal, but it is rather normal for animals that use vibrational signals. Thus, it may be a sign that suggests elephants can use seismic sounds to communicate. Part Two Other aspects of elephant anatomy also support that ability. First, their massive bodies, which enable them to give out low-frequency sounds almost as powerful as the sound a jet makes during takeoff, serve as ideal frames for receiving ground vibrations and transmitting them to the inner ear. Second, the elephant’s toe bones are set on a fatty pad, which might be of help when focusing vibrations from the ground into the bone. Finally, the elephant has an enormous brain that sits in the c...