Please help me solve this.

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Please help me solve this.

by beater » Tue Sep 30, 2008 4:43 pm
Earth’s surface consists of rigid
plates that are constantly shifting and
jostling one another. Plate movements
Line are the surface expressions of motions
(5) in the mantle—the thick shell of rock
that lies between Earth’s crust and its
metallic core. Although the hot rock of
the mantle is a solid, under the tre-
mendous pressure of the crust and
(10) overlying rock of the mantle, it flows like
a viscous liquid. The mantle’s motions,
analogous to those in a pot of boiling
water, cool the mantle by carrying hot
material to the surface and returning
(15) cooler material to the depths. When
the edge of one plate bends under
another and its cooler material is con-
sumed in the mantle, volcanic activity
occurs as molten lava rises from the
(20) downgoing plate and erupts through the
overlying one.
Most volcanoes occur at plate
boundaries. However, certain “mis-
placed” volcanoes far from plate
(25) edges result from a second, indepen-
dent mechanism that cools the deep
interior of Earth. Because of its prox-
imity to Earth’s core, the rock at the
base of the mantle is much hotter than
(30) rock in the upper mantle. The hotter the
mantle rock is, the less it resists flow-
ing. Reservoirs of this hot rock collect
in the base of the mantle. When a
reservoir is sufficiently large, a sphere
(35) of this hot rock forces its way up
through the upper mantle to Earth’s
surface, creating a broad bulge in the
topography. The “mantle plume” thus
formed, once established, continues to
(40) channel hot material from the mantle
base until the reservoir is emptied.
The surface mark of an established
plume is a hot spot—an isolated
region of volcanoes and uplifted terrain
(45) located far from the edge of a surface
plate. Because the source of a hot
spot remains fixed while a surface
plate moves over it, over a long period
of time an active plume creates a chain
(50) of volcanoes or volcanic islands, a
track marking the position of the plume
relative to the moving plate. The natural
history of the Hawaiian island chain
clearly shows the movement of the
Pacific plate over a fixed plume.

1. The passage is primarily concerned with discussing

A. the composition of Earth’s mantle
B. how the Hawaiian Islands were created
C. what causes Earth’s surface plates to move
D. two different mechanisms by which volcanoes are formed
E. why most volcanoes occur at plate boundaries


2. It can be inferred from the passage that a chain of volcanoes created by a mantle plume would most likely be characterized by

A. a curved outline
B. constituent volcanoes that differ from each other in age
C. occurrence near a plate boundary where one plate bends under another
D. appearance near many other volcanic chains
E. rocks with a wide range of chemical composition


3. The author’s reference to the Hawaiian Islands serves primarily to

A. provide an example of a type of volcanic activity that does not occur elsewhere
B. identify the evidence initially used to establish that the Pacific plate moves
C. call into question a theory about the source of the volcanoes that created the Hawaiian Islands
D. illustrate the distance from plate edges at which volcanoes typically appear
E. provide an example of how mantle plumes manifest themselves on Earth’s surface


4. According to the passage, a hot spot on Earth’s surface is an indication of which of the following?

A. An untapped reservoir of hot rock in the base of the mantle
B. Volcanic activity at the edge of a plate
C. Solid mantle rock under tremendous pressure
D. The occurrence of a phenomenon unique to the Pacific plate
E. A plume of hot mantle rock originating near Earth’s core

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by Stacey Koprince » Thu Oct 02, 2008 9:57 am
I received a PM asking me to respond to this post with some suggestions for where in the passage to find the answers for each question.

I know you mentioned that you don't need a detailed outline, but I need to read it anyway to figure out what to tell you, so I'm going to type in my thoughts to myself as I read it, just to give you an idea of how I process the passage.

Earth - plates moving around, showing motions deeper down
like boiling water - hot stuff comes to the top and cooler stuff goes down
can cause volcanoes (usually at plate boundaries)
BUT there's another way to get volcanoes:
hotter rock = flows more easily
this hot rock collects deep down
when you get enough, it pushes up to make a bulge (volcano) even though it's not at a plate boundary
this kind can create chains or islands of volcanoes - eg Hawaii

Then I'd go back and label my first three lines "1 way" and the rest "the other way" (meaning the passage is split into two different ways to make a volcano)

Notice that I didn't use much of the official terminology - if I get a question, I'll go back and look at that, but on my first read-through, I'm mostly concerned with getting the basic idea.

Q1 Main idea
a couple of different ways to make volcanoes (can get this from my notes above). Answer D says almost exactly that.

Q2 inference - chain of volcanoes - I remember that's from towards the end of my notes, so I go scan the passage again. around 50.
"over a long period of time an active plume creates a chain of volcanoes"
So, if it takes place over a long period of time, those volcanoes must be different in age relative to each other. A is tempting because I remember seeing maps of volcano chains... but that's not in the passage. C is contradicted by the passage. D and E aren't discussed - I have no idea (so, therefore, I can't infer the info).

Q3 why does the author refer to Hawaii
From my notes - Hawaii is an example of the chain thing
A is fine until we get to "does not occur elsewhere" - this is one of the major two ways of making volcanoes
scanning down... E matches my original idea (which I developed before looking at the choices) - it's an example of how this alternate way works

Q4 specific detail - a "hot spot" is an example of what?
That's about the "hotter rock" which was also talked about in the second way (chains), so scanning the passage... there it is, between 40 and 45.
"the surface mark of an established plume is a hot spot - an isolated region of volcanoes and uplifted terrain located far from the edge of a surface plate."
So, not B. Not D - says nothing about being unique to Pacific. Need a little more info - back to the passage. So the "hot spot" is this "established plume" thing and a "plume" is the result of a reservoir of very hot rock from the mantle (around line 35).

A says the reservoir is "untapped" - but if it's coming up to the surface, then we can't call it "untapped." C says the rock is under enormous pressure - and I generally believe that, but I'm not finding a place in the passage where it specifically says that.

E calls it a plume, which the passage does say, and also says it's mantle rock, which is true according to the passage. And E says that this mantle rock comes from near the core and the passage does say that this stuff comes from the "base" of the mantle and describes it as having "proximity to Earth's core." So this one looks right! (This is all coming from around 25-35.)
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by maihuna » Thu Jan 15, 2009 10:46 am
I came up with: D D B E, what is OA?

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by Bidisha800 » Sun Jan 25, 2009 5:05 pm
this question is 4 months old and I do not expect the owner of the question t come back and post the OAs. If anybody knows the source and OA please post the answers (very unlikely considering thin traffic in RC forums):

D
B
E
E
Drill baby drill !

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