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Acid Rain Can Severely Damage Both Plant and Animal Life

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Acid rain can severely damage both plant and animal life.

Certain lakes, for example, have lost all fish


and plant life because of acid rain. Acid rain comes from sulfur in coal and oil. When they burn, they
make sulfur dioxide (SO2 ). Most sulfur leaves factory chimneys as the gaseous sulfur dioxide (SO2 ) and
most nitrogen are also emitted as one of the nitrogen oxides (NO or NO2 ), both of which are gasses.
The gasses may be dry deposited–absorbed directly by the land, by lakes or by the surface vegetation. If
they are in the atmosphere at any time, the gasses will oxidize (gain an oxygen atom) and go into
solution as acids. Sulphuric acid (H2 SO4 ) and the nitrogen oxides will become nitric acid (HNO3 ). The
acids usually dissolve in cloud droplets and may travel great distances before being precipitated as acid
rain. Catalysts such as hydrogen peroxide, ozone, and ammonium help promote the formation of acids
in clouds. More ammonium (NH4 ) can be formed when some of the acids are partially neutralized by
airborne ammonia (NH3 ). Acidification increases with the number of active hydrogen (H+) ions
dissolved in acid. Hydrocarbons emitted by, for example, car exhausts will react in sunlight with nitrogen
oxides to produce ozone. Although it is invaluable in the atmosphere, low-level ozone causes respiratory
problems and also hastens the formation of acid rain. When acid rain falls on the ground it dissolves and
liberates heavy metals and aluminum (Al). When it is washed into lakes, aluminum irritates the outer
surfaces of many fish. As acid rain falls or drains into the lake the pH of the lake falls. Forests suffer the
effect of acid rain through damage to leaves, through the loss of vital nutrients, and through the
increased amounts of toxic metals liberated by acid, which damage roots and soil microorganisms.

Questions

1. What is the text mainly about?

A. The definition of acid rain.

B. The process of acid rain.

C. The effect of acid rain.

D. Acid rain.

E. Rain.

2. The acid of normal rain is … then the acid rain.

A. higher

B. lower

C. denser

D. severer
E. the same

3. The third paragraph tells about ….

A. acid rain damages environment

B. how acid rain endangers life

C. how acid rain occurs

D. the cause of acid rain

E. the acid rain cause

4. What is the result of the burning of the coal and oil?

A. ammonium

B. nitric acid

C. sulphuric acid

D. sulfur dioxide

E. airborne ammonia

5. The sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides will …. into the air.

A. be absorbed directly by the vegetation

B. dissolved in the lake water and land

C. emit another sulfur gas

D. radiate an oxygen atom

E. gain an oxygen atom

6. Which of the following is not true about acid rain?

A. It contains lower pH than the normal rain.

B. It has a higher pH than the normal rain

C. It can damage animal and plant life.

D. It contains dangerous gasses.

E. It endangers water life.


7 …. is dangerous for the scale of fish in the lake.

A. Acid rain

B. Heavy metal

C. Aluminum

D. Vital Nutrient

E. Sulphuric acid

8. What is the purpose of the text?

A. To report the acid rain in general.

B. To explain the process of acid rain.

C. To persuade the reader to prevent acid rain.

D. To discuss the danger of acid rain in the air.

E. To present two different opinions on acid rain process.

9. If they are in the atmosphere at any time, …. The italic word can be best replaced by ….

A. oil and coal

B. land and air

C. sulfur oxides

D. nitrogen oxides

E. sulfur and nitrogen oxides

10. Acid rain can severely damage both plant and animal life. The bold word has the closest meaning to
….

A. harm

B. hang

C. endow
D. produce

E. develop

Answers

DBCDEACBEA

1. What is the text mainly about?

A. The definition of acid rain.

B. The process of acid rain.

C. The effect of acid rain.

D. Acid rain.

E. Rain.

2. The acid of normal rain is … then the acid rain.

A. higher

B. lower

C. denser

D. severer

E. the same

3. The third paragraph tells about ….

A. acid rain damages environment

B. how acid rain endangers life

C. how acid rain occurs

D. the cause of acid rain

E. the acid rain cause

4. What is the result of the burning of the coal and oil?

A. ammonium

B. nitric acid
C. sulphuric acid

D. sulfur dioxide

E. airborne ammonia

5. The sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides will …. into the air.

A. be absorbed directly by the vegetation

B. dissolved in the lake water and land

C. emit another sulfur gas

D. radiate an oxygen atom

E. gain an oxygen atom

6. Which of the following is not true about acid rain?

A. It contains lower pH than the normal rain.

B. It has a higher pH than the normal rain

C. It can damage animal and plant life.

D. It contains dangerous gasses.

E. It endangers water life.

7 …. is dangerous for the scale of fish in the lake.

A. Acid rain

B. Heavy metal

C. Aluminum

D. Vital Nutrient

E. Sulphuric acid

8. What is the purpose of the text?

A. To report the acid rain in general.

B. To explain the process of acid rain.

C. To persuade the reader to prevent acid rain.


D. To discuss the danger of acid rain in the air.

E. To present two different opinions on acid rain process.

9. If they are in the atmosphere at any time, …. The italic word can be best replaced by ….

A. oil and coal

B. land and air

C. sulfur oxides

D. nitrogen oxides

E. sulfur and nitrogen oxides

10. Acid rain can severely damage both plant and animal life. The bold word has the closest meaning to
….

A. harm

B. hang

C. endow

D. produce

E. develop

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