小编为大家整理了2018年12月15日的
1. Why does the student go to see the professor?
A. To find out why the mining industry in the western United States declined in the 1800s
B. To find out how to improve the first draft of a paper she is writing
C. To ask the professor to recommend sources of information for a research paper
D. To get advice about a possible topic for a research paper
2. What aspect of the history of Park City, Utah, interests the student?
A. The reasons Park City went through periods of economic hardship and success
B. The reasons Park City became a destination popular among skiers
C. How Park City became the main source of silver in the United States
D. Why Park City recovered from a national recession more quickly than other towns did
3. What does the professor say were two important factors in the decline in silver mining in Park City, Utah?Click on 2 answers.
A. The increasing cost of extracting silver
B. A decline in the price being paid for silver
C. The higher wages being paid to miners in other places
D. A national downturn in economic activity
4. Why does the professor mention the town of Bodie, California?
A. To emphasize the economic problems in the mining industry during the early 1900s
B. To illustrate the wide appeal of skiing in the United States in the early 1900s
C. To give an example of a former mining town that survived without becoming a ski resort
D. To give an example of a town that remained a mining town well into the 1900s
5. What do the student and professor agree that the student should do as part of her research?Click on 3 answers.
A. Try to find firsthand accounts of life in mining towns
B. Investigate in detail the events in a few specific towns
C. Consider the role of flooding in the decline of Bodie, California
D. Determine why most failed mining towns did not recover economically
E. Look at the history of mining towns in the context of the history of the United States as a whole
Narrator:Listen to a conversation between a student, and an American History professor.
Karen:Professor Farrington? I have a quick question. Uh- about something you said in class yesterday?
Professor:Sure, Karen.
Karen:You mentioned that um, about how Park City in Utahwent from a Boom Town in the 1800s to a Ghost town,and then became prosperous again. I was - Well, that’san interesting cycle, and well, maybe for my researchpaper, I…
Professor:Yeah, that might make a good topic! Since similar thingshappened in other mining towns.
Karen:So, comparing them might be interesting?
Professor:Yup. Absolutely.
Karen:So what triggered the downward turn in Park City?
Professor:Well, in 1870, there were fewer than few hundred peopleliving in the Park City Area. After silver was discoveredthere, the population grew very quickly! I think it reachedabout..10,000? By 1900s. But, soon after that, the silverthat was close to the surface had all been mined. So theyhad to dig deeper and deeper. Which reduced the profitmargin, not-not just because it’s time consuming, butgoing deeper led to problems of flooding. It’s timeconsuming and expensive to pump water out mud. So,that was the big thing! I think. I mean, there are otherfactors that contributed, too. Like, the recession and astock market panic in 1907, if you do write about this,you have to get into that.
Karen:Okay! And it was… what, tourism that brought it back upagain?
Professor:Basically, yes. The ski industry kind of stopped andstarted about the same time. In the 1920s. At first it wasonly a few folks hiking up to the top of the mountain andthen skiing down, as the sport became popular, so didthe mountains around Park City. By the 1960s, it was amajor ski resort, with thousands of skiers.
Karen:And the same with the other abandoned mining towns?
Professor:Well, some. But some became tourist attractions notbecause of skiing, but because people were interested intheir history. Um, one old mining town in the middle ofthe Californian desert, it’s called Bodie. That’s nowState park. It’s popular because the buildings have beenpreserved as they were in the 1940s.
Karen:Wow. So maybe I could choose a couple of towns thatwent through that whole cycle and talk about them insome depth, as a way of illustrating the general boomand bust phenomenon? Maybe find some firsthandaccounts?
Professor:Well, for this, yes - it’d better to go into some depthabout specific towns. Rather than talking about a lot ofthem in broad terms. And yeah! Definitely, give it a shot!But, you probably won’t be able to find many diaries orpersonal accounts. Not many people who lived in miningtowns could read or write. Oh, and also, remember theimpact of National Events.
Karen: Right. The local AND the national. Okay. Thanks!
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