PART 4 — Cambridge IELTS 19 Academic 2024 TEST 1 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 19 Academic 2024 TEST 1

PART 4

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(0:00) Part 4. You will hear an archaeology student giving a presentation on an important site in Ireland (0:08) called the Cagey Fields. First you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. (1:20) Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.
(1:28) For my presentation today I'm going to talk about the Cagey Fields in the northwest of Ireland, (1:35) one of the largest Neolithic sites in the world. I recently visited this site and observed the (1:43) work that is currently being done by a team of archaeologists there. The site was first (1:49) discovered in the 1930s by a local teacher, Patrick Caulfield.
He noticed that when local
(1:56) people were digging in the bog, they were constantly hitting against what seemed to be (2:01) rows of stones. He realised that these must be walls and that they must be thousands of (2:08) years old for them to predate the bog which subsequently grew over them. He wrote to the (2:14) National Museum in Dublin to ask them to investigate, but no one took him seriously.
(2:20) It wasn't until 40 years later when Patrick Caulfield's son, Seamus, who had become an (2:27) archaeologist by then, began to explore further. He inserted iron probes into the bog to map the (2:35) formation of the stones, a traditional method which local people had always used for finding (2:41) fuel buried in the bog for thousands of years. Carbon dating later proved that the site was over (2:48) 5,000 years old and was the largest Neolithic site in Ireland.
Thanks to the bog which covers
(2:56) the area, the remains of the settlement at Cagey Fields, which is over 5,000 years old, (3:03) are extremely well preserved. A bog is 90% water, its soil so saturated that when the grasses and (3:12) heathers that grow on its surface die, they don't fully decay but accumulate in layers. (3:20) Objects remain so well preserved in these conditions because of the acidity of the peat (3:25) and the deficiency of oxygen.
At least 175 days of rain a year are required for this to happen.
(3:34) This part of Ireland gets an average of 225 days. The Neolithic farmers at Cagey would have enjoyed (3:47) several centuries of relative peace and stability.
Neolithic farmers generally lived in larger
(3:53) communities than their predecessors, with a number of houses built around a community building. (4:00) As they lived in permanent settlements, Neolithic farmers were able to build bigger houses. (4:06) These weren't round, as people often assume, but rectangular, with a small hole in the roof (4:12) that allowed smoke to escape.
This is one of many innovations and indicates that the
(4:19) Neolithic farmers were the first people to cook indoors. Another new technology that (4:25) Neolithic settlers brought to Ireland was pottery. Fragments of Neolithic pots have been found in (4:32) Cagey and elsewhere in Ireland.
The pots were used for many things, as well as for storing food.
(4:39) Pots were filled with a small amount of fat, and when this was set alight, they served as lamps. (4:47) It's thought that the Cagey fields were mainly used as paddocks for animals to graze in.
(4:53) Evidence from the Cagey fields suggests that each plot of land was of a suitable size (4:58) to sustain an extended family. They may have used a system of rotational grazing (5:04) in order to prevent overgrazing and to allow for plant recovery and regrowth. (5:11) This must have been a year-round activity, as no structures have been found which would have (5:15) been used to shelter animals in the winter.
However, archaeologists believe that this way
(5:22) of life at Cagey ceased abruptly. Why was this? Well, several factors may have contributed to the (5:30) changing circumstances. The soil would have become less productive and led to the abandonment of (5:36) farming.
The crop rotation system was partly responsible for this, as it would have been
(5:42) very intensive and was not sustainable. But there were also climatic pressures too. (5:48) The farmers at Cagey would have enjoyed a relatively dry period, but this began to (5:54) change and the conditions became wetter as there was a lot more rain.
It was these conditions that
(6:01) encouraged the bog to form over the area, which survives today. So now I'd like to show you some... (6:11) That is the end of part 4. You now have one minute to check your answers to part 4. (7:18) That is the end of the listening test. In the IELTS test, you would now have (7:23) 10 minutes to transfer your answers to the listening answer sheet.

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