题干

依次填入下面一段文字横线处的语句,衔接最恰当的一组是(  )

镬耳屋是岭南传统民居的代表,多用青砖、石柱、石板砌成,外墙壁均有花鸟图案。           。镬,是古时的一种大锅,因此,镬耳屋亦称“锅耳屋”。                                                       

①火灾时,高耸的山墙可阻止火势蔓延和侵入

②民间还有镬耳屋蕴含富贵吉祥、丰衣足食一说

③因其山墙状似镬耳,故称“镬耳屋”

④微风吹动时,山墙可挡风入巷道,进而通过门、窗流入屋内

⑤镬耳状建筑具有防火、通风性能良好等特点

⑥镬耳屋以广府风格的民居建筑为主要代表,潮汕、客家的民居建筑亦有类似的镬耳山墙

A:③⑤④①⑥②

B:③②⑤①④⑥

C:③⑥⑤①④②

D:③⑤①④②⑥

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D

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Cure for tiredness?

    Staying up late is a potential battle between parents and kids. But the solution could be as simple as changing your meal time.

    Researchers at the University of Surry, UK, found that delaying meals could help change one of the internal body clocks. Besides a “master” clock in the brain, there are clocks in other parts of the body. They are usually synchronized according to factors including light.

    During the study, researchers tested 10 participants to examine the effect of changing meal times on their body clocks. The participants were given three meals ---breakfast, lunch and dinner. In the first stage, participants received breakfast 30 minutes after waking. Lunch and dinner followed, after 5-hour intervals. In the second stage, each meal was delayed by 5 hours. Right after each stage, blood and fat samples were collected.

    Results showed that later meal times greatly influenced blood sugar levels. A 5-hour delay in meal times caused a 5-hour delay in the internal blood sugar rhythms.

    The discovery showed that meal times are in line with the body clock that controls blood sugar levels.

    This is a small study but the researchers believe the findings could help jet lag sufferers and night-shift workers.

    In a study by the University of Surrey in 2013, researchers explored what happened when a person's body was changed from a normal pattern to that of a night-shift worker's.

    After people work through the night, over 97 percent of the body's rhythmic genes are disrupted(扰乱,使混乱).

    These findings explain why we feel so bad following a long flight, or after working at night, according to Simon Archer, one of the study's researchers.

    “It's like living in a house. There's a clock in every room in the house and in all of those rooms those clocks are now disrupted, which of course leads to chaos in the household,” fellow researcher DerkJan Dijk told the BBC.

    Changing meal times didn't affect the “master” body clock --- the one controlling when we get sleepy --- but it can reset the body clock that controls blood sugar levels. This wouldn't necessarily cure jet lag completely, but it might reduce the negative effects.

A study published earlier this year suggested that just a weekend camping trip could be enough to reset our body clocks. And now this latest research shows regular food schedules could play a key part too.