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Type: Multiple-Choice
Category: Main Idea
Level: Grade 7
Standards: CCRA.R.5, RI.7.5, RH.6-8.5, RST.6-8.5
Tags: ELA-Literacy.RI.7.2
Author: ReadingMatters
Created: 11 years ago

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Our world is always changing. Look out your window long enough, and you might see the
weather change. Look even longer, and you'll see the seasons change. The Earth's climate is changing, too, but in ways that you can't easily see.

The Earth is getting warmer because people are adding heat-trapping gases to the atmosphere, mainly by burning fossil fuels. These gases are called greenhouse gases. Warmer temperatures are causing other changes around the world, such as melting glaciers and stronger storms. These changes are happening because the Earth's air, water, and land are all linked to the climate. The Earth's climate has changed before, but this time is different. People are causing these changes, which are bigger and happening faster than any climate changes that modern society has ever seen before.

More than 100 years ago, people around the world started burning large amounts of coal, oil, and natural gas to power their homes, factories, and vehicles. Today, most of the world relies on these fossil fuels for their energy needs. Burning fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping gas, into the atmosphere, which is the main reason why the climate is changing.

Heat-trapping gases are also called greenhouse gases. They exist naturally in the atmosphere, where they help keep the Earth warm enough for plants and animals to live. But people are adding extra greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. These extra gases are causing the Earth to get warmer, setting off all sorts of other changes around the world - on land, in the oceans, and in the atmosphere. And these changes affect people, plants, and animals in many ways.

Grade 7 Main Idea CCSS: CCRA.R.5, RI.7.5, RH.6-8.5, RST.6-8.5

Which detail would fit best after the last sentence of the text?
  1. These types of gases trap heat in the atmosphere.
  2. Temperatures in this city have dropped ten degrees a year.
  3. Like dominoes, one change sets off another in a cascade.
  4. Some politicians do not accept global warming is a reality.