题干

人的肌肉组织分为快肌纤维和慢肌纤维两种,快肌纤维几乎不含有线粒体,与短跑等剧烈运动有关;慢肌纤维与慢跑等有氧运动有关。下列叙述错误的是(    )

A:消耗等摩尔葡萄糖,快肌纤维比慢肌纤维产生的ATP多

B:两种肌纤维均可在细胞质基质中产生丙酮酸、H和ATP

C:短跑时快肌纤维无氧呼吸产生大量乳酸,故产生酸痛感觉

D:慢跑时慢肌纤维产生的ATP,主要来自于线粒体内膜

上一题 下一题 0.0难度 选择题 更新时间:2013-05-07 02:17:59

答案(点此获取答案解析)

A

同类题2

阅读理解

    Imagine waking up one day and finding that your beautiful local beach is no more—gone, its fine white sand swept away by an abnormal storm. You go about your daily business for 12 long years and then suddenly the beach is back, all its glory restored by another storm. This is what happened on the island of Achill, off the coast of Ireland, where people are celebrating the return of the beautiful Ashleam Bay beach that was taken from them in 2005.

    That in itself is unusual enough, but the story gets even better! You see, another beach in Achill did a disappearing act once, but took much longer to return. The beach at Doonagh, located only six miles away from Ashleam Bay, was restored earlier in 2016 after waves created by spring storms had swept away all the sand in 1984, leaving just rock pools behind.

    There is local legend that stretches back hundreds of years that says this beach at Ashlcam Bay returns for a short every seven years then disappears again. But this time around it took a bit longer than that. It was last seen in 2005 and it stayed for a few months at that time before it was washed away again.

    As you can imagine, everyone on the island of Achill is thrilled to have their sandy beach back, and even though no one knows how long it's going to be around for, they are making the most of the time they've got before it disappears again.

    Some may be quick to believe climate changes cause the phenomenon, but that's not the reason these two beaches in Achill keep disappearing, Dr Kevin Lynch, a geographer at NUT Galway, says that these occurrences are the result of hydrodynamics (流体力学) and sediment(沉积物) supply, rather than climate changes.

    Regardless of what's causing them, disappearing and reappearing beaches are just part of what makes nature so fascinating.