1.单选题- (共14题)

【小题1】图甲表示人口迁移的拉力和推力示意图,下列表示推力因素的是( )
A.矿产资源丰富 | B.文化教育发达 |
C.土壤盐渍化 | D.老龄化 |
A.大庆 | B.攀枝花 |
C.金昌 | D.珠海 |
A.自然环境 | B.国家政策 |
C.社会经济 | D.战争 |




A.①德国、②俄罗斯、③日本、④美国 | B.①俄罗斯、②德国、③美国、④日本 |
C.①美国、②日本、③俄罗斯、④德国 | D.①日本、②美国、③德国、④俄罗斯 |

【小题1】该市迁入人口的特征有( )
A.男性人口多于女性人口 | B.人口迁移主要受政策因素影响 |
C.以青壮年人口为主 | D.与该市原有人口年龄构成相似 |
A.缓和了当地就业紧张局面 | B.制约了该市的经济发展 |
C.改善城市环境 | D.加大了城市基础设施的压力 |
下表是我国第五次人口普查时江苏省某市迁入人口年龄及性别统计表,据此回答下面小题。
①男性人口多于女性人口 ②人口迁移主要受经济因素影响
③以青壮年人口为主 ④与该市原有人口年龄构成相似
A.①② | B.②③ | C.③④ | D.①④ |
①缓和了当地就业紧张的局面 ②制约了该市的经济发展
③增加了该市的被抚养人口 ④加大了城市基础设施压力
A.①② | B.②③ | C.③④ | D.①④ |
A.经济因素、政治因素、生态因素 | B.只有政治因素 |
C.只有政治因素和生态因素 | D.只有经济因素 |

【小题1】关于人口迁移的叙述,正确的是( )
A.主要由人口多的国家迁往人口少的国家 | B.主要由发展中国家迁往发达国家 |
C.全球迁出人口少于迁入人口 | D.主要由亚洲国家迁往拉丁美洲国家 |
A.减轻了迁入地的就业压力 | B.加重了迁出地的环境压力 |
C.为迁入地提供劳动力,促进经济发展 | D.对迁出地人们生活观念的更新没有帮助 |

【小题1】从图中可以看出二战后,人口( )
A.都为发达国家迁往发展中国家 | B.都为发展中国家迁往发达国家 |
C.主要为经济较落后地区迁往收入高的地区 | D.主要由南半球国家迁往北半球国家 |
A.自然因素 | B.战争 | C.水利建设 | D.经济因素 |
A.今天,地球陆地上的绝大部分地区都有人类活动,主要原因在于人口迁移 |
B.随着生产力的发展,社会经济因素成为人口迁移的主要因素 |
C.人口迁移对迁出地和迁入地的经济发展、生态环境的改善均有利,不会加剧迁入地的生态环境问题 |
D.大量的农村人口涌人城市,既推动了城市的社会经济发展,也给城市环境造成了巨大的压力 |

【小题1】判断下列说法正确的是( )
A.a称为人口迁移,b称为人口从城市到乡村的迁移 | B.c不能叫人口迁移 |
C.b目前主要发生在我国各大城市 | D.d主要发生在发展中国家 |
A.a | B.b | C.c | D.d |
A.大学生暑假回家 | B.牧民上山放牧 |
C.由上海调往北京工作定居 | D.农民利用农闲进城打工 |

【小题1】图甲表示人口迁移的拉力和推力示意图,下列表示不表示拉力因素的是( )
A.矿产资源丰富 | B.就业机会多 | C.水土流失 | D.教育与升迁机会多 |
A.齐齐哈尔 | B.攀枝花 | C.文昌 | D.深圳 |
A.自然生态环境因素、社会文化因素 | B.社会文化因素、政治因素 |
C.经济因素、社会文化因素 | D.政治因素、自然生态环境因素 |

【小题1】图中数据显示( )
A.农村劳动力的迁移日益低龄化 | B.农村劳动力逐渐高龄化 |
C.农村劳动力以20~29岁年龄段为主 | D.50~59岁人口迁移率变化幅度最大 |
A.农村产业结构调整 | B.城乡经济收入差异较大 |
C.交通条件改善 | D.农村基础设施逐步完善 |

A.从人口年龄结构上看以青壮年居多 | B.从人口移动形式上看以线形分散为主 |
C.从人口移动距离上看以长距离迁移居多 | D.从人口受教育程度上看以高学历人口居多 |
2.选择题- (共2题)
Hold your smartphone, smile at the front camera, and click! You get a selfie. There is no doubt that this photo is yours. But if a monkey takes a selfie, does the camera owner have the right to decide how to use it?
Recently, this question has caused a problem between Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization, and British wildlife photographer David J. Slater.
In 2011, Slater was visiting a park in Indonesia when a macaque(猕猴) got hold of one of his cameras. “They were quite naughty, jumping all over my equipment,” Slater told The Telegraph, “and it looked like they were already posing for the camera when one hit the button.” The result was hundreds of monkey selfies. The best of images was a female macaque grinning toothily into the lens.
This week, the grinning monkey selfie returned to the news when Wikimedia refused Slater's request to take the photos down from Wikimedia Commons, a website that is run by the organization and offers free images. 5
According to Wikimedia, anyone who downloads the monkey selfie, or any of the millions of images on the site, can “copy and use any works here freely as long as they follow what the author says.” The question that arose here was whether Slater, who had not held the camera, set up the shot, or pressed the shutter(快门) button, could be considered the photographer of the monkey selfie. Wikimedia's position on this was clear: as the work of a non-human animal, this photo has no human author who owns the copyright.”
Only authors of creative works, like a piece of writing or a song, own copyrights. In terms of photos, US copyright law says whoever pushes the button on the camera owns the copyright to the image produced, which means that if tourists ask you to take a photo of them, and you happen to hit the shutter button at the exact moment that Justin Bieber, a Canadian singer, made faces behind them. You, as the photographer, would have the photo's copyright and sell it. The tourists, who own the camera on which the photo was taken and asked you to take the photo don't get the right to use it without you allowing them to. All this has been complicated by the appearance of surveillance cameras(监控摄像头), smart phones, and large-scale photography projects for which assistants often press the shutter button to produce works whose copyrights belong to their boss.
Slater seems to be thinking along these lines. He says that buying the cameras, spending thousands of pounds to transport himself to Indonesia, and allowing the monkeys to “steal” his cameras makes him the author of the image, regardless of who pushed the button. “In law, if I have an assistant then I still own the copyright,” he told the “Today” Show. “I believe in this case, the monkey was my assistant.”
If that seems unfair, think about this. If a person left her laptop in a café, and a poet picked it up, opened up a word-processing program, and typed out a poem which turned out to be the best poem of this generation, could she ask for much more than her laptop back?
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【1】题量占比
单选题:(14道)
选择题:(2道)
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【2】:难度分析
1星难题:0
2星难题:0
3星难题:0
4星难题:0
5星难题:0
6星难题:0
7星难题:0
8星难题:0
9星难题:14