Ielts Academic Reading Practice Test 47 Fa9763839b

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Pulling Strings To Build Pyramids Reading passage

Pulling Strings To Build Pyramids

No one knows exactly how the pyramids were built. Marcus Chown reckons the answer
could be 'hanging in the air'.

The pyramids of Egypt were built more than three thousand years ago, and no one knows
how. The conventional picture is that tens of thousands of slaves dragged stones on
sledges. But there is no evidence to back this up. Now a Californian software consultant
called Maureen Clemmons has suggested that kites might have been involved. While
perusing a book on the monuments of Egypt, she noticed a hieroglyph that showed a row of
men standing in odd postures. They were holding what looked like ropes that led, via some
kind of mechanical system, to a giant bird in the sky. She wondered if perhaps the bird was
actually a giant kite, and the men were using it to lift a heavy object.

Intrigued, Clemmons contacted Morteza Gharib, aeronautics professor at the California


Institute of Technology. He was fascinated by the idea. 'Coming from Iran, I have a keen
interest in Middle Eastern science/ he says. He too was puzzled by the picture that had
sparked Clemmons's interest. The object in the sky apparently had wings far too short and
wide for a bird. The possibility certainly existed that it was a kite/ he says. And since he
needed a summer project for his student Emilio Graff, investigating the possibility of using
kites as heavy lifters seemed like a good idea.

Gharib and Graff set themselves the task of raising a 4.5-metre stone column from horizontal
to vertical, using no source of energy except the wind. Their initial calculations and
scale-model wind-tunnel experiments convinced them they wouldn't need a strong wind to lift
the 33.5-tonne column. Even a modest force, if sustained over a long time, would do. The
key was to use a pulley system that would magnify the applied force. So they rigged up a
tent-shaped scaffold directly above the tip of the horizontal column, with pulleys suspended
from the scaffold's apex. The idea was that as one end of the column rose, the base would
roll across the ground on a trolley.

Earlier this year, the team put Clemmons's unlikely theory to the test, using a
40-square-metre rectangular nylon sail. The kite lifted the column clean off the ground. 'We
were absolutely stunned,' Gharib says. The instant the sail opened into the wind, a huge
force was generated and the column was raised to the vertical in a mere 40 seconds.'

The wind was blowing at a gentle 16 to 20 kilometres an hour, little more than half what they
thought would be needed. What they had failed to reckon with was what happened when the
kite was opened. There was a huge initial force - five times larger than the steady state
force,' Gharib says. This jerk meant that kites could lift huge weights, Gharib realized. Even
a 300-ton column could have been lifted to the vertical with 40 or so men and four or five
sails. So Clemmons was right: the pyramid builders could have used kites to lift massive
stones into place. 'Whether they actually did is another matter,' Gharib says. There are no
pictures showing the construction of the pyramids, so there is no way to tell what really
happened. The evidence for using kites to move large stones is no better or worse than the
evidence for the brute force method,' Gharib says.

Indeed, the experiments have left many specialists unconvinced. The evidence for kite lifting
is non-existent,' says Willeke Wendrich, an associate professor of Egyptology at the
University of California, Los Angeles.

Others feel there is more of a case for the theory. Harnessing the wind would not have been
a problem for accomplished sailors like the Egyptians. And they are known to have used
wooden pulleys, which could have been made strong enough to bear the weight of massive
blocks of stone. In addition, there is some physical evidence that the ancient Egyptians were
interested in flight. A wooden artefact found on the step pyramid at Saqqara looks uncannily
like a modern glider. Although it dates from several hundred years after the building of the
pyramids, its sophistication suggests that the Egyptians might have been developing ideas
of flight for a long time. And other ancient civilisations certainly knew about kites; as early as
1250 BC, the Chinese were using them to deliver messages and dump flaming debris on
their foes.

The experiments might even have practical uses nowadays. There are plenty of places
around the globe where people have no access to heavy machinery, but do know how to
deal with wind, sailing and basic mechanical principles. Gharib has already been contacted
by a civil engineer in Nicaragua, who wants to put up buildings with adobe roofs supported
by concrete arches on a site that heavy equipment can't reach. His idea is to build the
arches horizontally, then lift them into place using kites. 'We've given him some design hints,'
says Gharib. We're just waiting for him to report back.' So whether they were actually used to
build the pyramids or not, it seems that kites may make sensible construction tools in the 21
st century AD.

Pulling Strings To Build Pyramids Reading Questions

Questions 1-7

Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage?

In boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet, write

TRUE if the statement agrees with the information

FALSE if the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this


1 It is generally believed that large numbers of people were needed to build the pyramids.
2 Clemmons found a strange hieroglyph on the wall of an Egyptian monument.
3 Gharib had previously done experiments on bird flight.
4 Gharib and Graff tested their theory before applying it.
5 The success of the actual experiment was due to the high speed of the wind.
6 They found that, as the kite flew higher, the wind force got stronger.
7 The team decided that it was possible to use kites to raise very heavy stones.

Questions 8–13

Complete the summary below.

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet.

Additional evidence for theory of kite-lifting

The Egyptians had 8________ which could lift large pieces of 9________ and they knew
how to use the energy of the wind from their skill as 10________. The discovery on one
pyramid of an object which resembled a 11________ suggests they may have experimented
with 12________. In addition, over two thousand years ago kites were used in China as
weapons, as well as for sending 13________ .

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