Fill in each of the 15 blanks in the passage with the most likely
answer. Our ape-men forefathers had no
obvious natural weapons in the struggle for survival in the open. They had
neither the powerful teeth nor the strong claws of the big cats. They could not
1 with the bear, whose strength, speed
and claws 2 an impressive "small-fire"
weaponry. They could not even defend themselves 3
running swiftly like the horse, zebras or small animals. If the
ape-men had attempted to compete on those terms in the open, they would have
been 4 to failure and extinction. But
they were 5 with enormous concealed
advantages of a kind not possessed by any of their competitors.
In the search 6 the pickings of the
forest, the ape-men had 7 efficient
stereoscopic vision and a sense of color that the animals of the grasslands did
not possess. The ability to see clearly at close range permitted the ape-men to
study practical problems in a way that lay far 8
the reach of the original inhabitants of the grassland. Good
long-distance sight was 9 another
matter. Lack of long-distance vision had not been a problem for forest-dwelling
apes and monkeys because the higher the viewpoint, the greater the range of
sight—so 10 they had had to do was
climb a tree. Out in the open, however, this simple solution was not 11 Climbing a hill would have helped, but in many
places the ground was flat. The ape-men 12 the only possible solution. They reared up as high as possible on their hind
limbs and began to walk upright. This vital change of physical
position brought about considerable disadvantages. It was extremely unstable and
it meant that the already slow ape-men became slower still.
13 , they persevered and their bone structure gradually
became 14 to the new, unstable position
that 15 them the name Homo erectus,
upright man.
A. However
B. Therefore
C. Meanwhile
D. Subsequently