PASSAGE 1 The Trans-Australian Railway (TAR)
26 تیر 1403 1403-08-12 10:52PASSAGE 1 The Trans-Australian Railway (TAR)
READING PASSAGE 1
Answer Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 on pages 2 and 3.
The Trans-Australian Railway (TAR)
Up until the first part of the 20th century, communications across the Australian continent were relatively undeveloped. Perth, the capital of Western Australia, remained isolated from Australia’s eastern states until the Trans-Australian Railway (TAR) was built across the arid area known as the Nullarbor (No Trees) Plain. During the 19th century, the only form of transport between the west coast and the eastern cities was a long and often rough sea voyage across the Great Australian Bight, while the first east-west crossing of the Nullarbor Plain on foot was achieved by the English explorer Edward Eyre and his indigenous Australian guide Wylie in 1841. In 1877 a telegraph line was built across the plain, and it was this man-made structure that a mining engineer called Arthur Richardson followed, when he set out in 1896 to be the first to ride a bicycle around the Australian continent.
The first railway in Western Australia had opened in 1871, and by 1896 there was a 313-mile line going eastwards through the inhospitable landscape as far as Kalgoorlie. This line was built alongside a pipeline carrying drinking water to the arid goldfields around Kalgoorlie. Meanwhile, in the south-east of the continent, a railway line from Port Augusta to Oodnadetta had opened in 1891. These early railways in both the east and the west were built to the narrow gauge of 3ft 6in.
In 1901, the self-governing colonies of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia and Western Australia got together to form a federation. One of the incentives held out to Western Australia to become a member had been the promise of a trans-continental railway linking Perth with the eastern cities. A survey of the route across the featureless Nullarbor Plain was completed in 1909, and construction started to join the two existing railways at each end in 1912. Despite the onset of the First World War, work progressed until the two lines finally converged, at a site in an area of desert, in 1917. The railway’s claim to fame is that its route includes the longest stretch – 297 miles- of straight track in the world. Although the existing railways at each end had been built to the narrow gauge, the new 1,052 mile stretch was built to the standard gauge of 4ft Bin. These two breaks of gauge would mean a true trans-continental service did not exist until 1970.
Water supplies for steam engines on the TAR route were non-existent, as the railway did not cross a permanent watercourse along its entire length. To overcome this, the TAR line’s original chief engineer had requested diesel engines, but his request was not granted, so steam haulage had to be supported by extra water tankers carried on each train. Australian built, diesel electric engines eventually replaced steam haulage in 1951.
As well as being an important freight route, the new line saw the introduction of the Trans Australian Express, a service which commenced running in 1917 to serve isolated communities and settlements along its route. For much of its long-running life, this twice weekly train consisted solely of sleeping cars; seated accommodation was only included from 1981 until the service terminated ten years later. The route of the train was extended following the conversion to standard gauge of its narrow-gauge sections in 1970, but facing increased competition from air travel it last ran in June 1991.
One long-lived curiosity of the trans-Australian network was the Tea and Sugar Train, which also started running in 1917. The train brought to communities along the route not only the necessities for everyday life, but also a butcher’s shop, medical facilities and a cinema. It last ran in 1996.
Despite the withdrawal of the Trans-Australian Express between Adelaide and Perth in 1991, the Indian Pacific service has operated between Sydney on the east coast and Perth since 1970, the year that the TAR route was completely converted to standard gauge. This service is operated by Great Southern Rail. It runs twice a week between Adelaide and Perth, and once a week between Sydney and Perth. The journey time for the complete 2,704-mile journey is 66% hours westbound and 71%4 hours eastbound.
The Indian Pacific service calls by at the isolated outback railway settlements of Pimba, which has a population of around fifty, Kingoonya, which only has a hotel, and
Tarcoola, which has a population of around forty and is a junction for the south-north line to Darwin. It then travels to Cook, which, despite having a population of fewer than ten, is a scheduled stop, before crossing the Nullarbor Plain in a dead straight line for 297 miles to Loongana, which is uninhabited and is a request stop, and Rawlinna, also a request stop serving Australia’s largest sheep station. Civilisation is eventually reached at Kalgoorlie before the last leg of the journey westwards to East Perth Station. The train has carriages with seating, sleeping cars, a restaurant car, and wagons conveying passengers’ motor cars.
Questions 1-8
Complete the table below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
Early long-distance communications in Australia
Date Details
19th century • lack of public transport across the continent resulted in people travelling by 1………….
1841 • an explorer walked across the Nullarbor Plain with the help of a
2………….
1877 • equipment for the 3…………. was installed in the Nullarbor Plain
1896 • a new railway line in Western Australia followed the route of a
4………….
1901 • the prospect of an interstate railway persuaded Western Australia to join a 5………….
1917 • TAR was completed in a 6 ……….. location
• the 7 ………… section of TAR was longer than that in any other country
• The new 4ft 8½ inch TAR track was a 8 ………… width
Questions 9-16
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 9-16 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
9 The first chief engineer’s recommendation for TAR trains was fully implemented.
10 The Trans-Australian Express was popular with both local residents and tourists.
11 Demand for Trans-Australian Express services eventually fell due to the availability of alternative transport.
12 The Tea and Sugar Train provided health services as well as food supplies.
13 The Indian Pacific service was introduced before the entire TAR route became a standard gauge.
14 Some of the stops on the Indian Pacific route have to be specially arranged.
1. sea voyage (paragraph 1)
2. guide (paragraph 1)
3. telegraph (paragraph 1)
4. pipeline (paragraph 2)
5. federation (paragraph 3)
6. desert (paragraph 3)
7. straight (paragraph 3)
8. standard (paragraph 7)
9. FALSE (paragraph 4) – The first chief engineer requested diesel engines, but his request was not granted.
10. NOT GIVEN (passage doesn’t discuss popularity) – The passage mentions the Trans Australian Express but doesn’t provide information on its popularity with locals or tourists.
11. TRUE (paragraph 5) – The service was terminated in 1991 due to competition from air travel.
12. TRUE (paragraph 6) – The Tea and Sugar Train brought “a butcher’s shop, medical facilities and a cinema” to the communities.
13. FALSE (paragraph 7) – The conversion to standard gauge happened in 1970, while the Indian Pacific service began in 1970.
14. TRUE (paragraph 8) – Loongana and Rawlinna are “request stops.”