首页
登录
职称英语
Volcanoes—Earth-shattering NewsA)Volcanoes are the ultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shattering NewsA)Volcanoes are the ultimate
游客
2023-08-23
83
管理
问题
Volcanoes—Earth-shattering News
A)Volcanoes are the ultimate earth-moving machinery. A violent eruption can blow the top few kilometres off a mountain, scatter fine ash practically all over the globe and hurt rock fragments into the stratosphere to darken the skies a continent away.
B)But the classic eruption—cone-shaped mountain, big bang, mushroom cloud and surges of molten lava—is only a tiny part of a global story. Volcanism, the name given to volcanic processes, really has shaped the world. Eruptions have rifted continents, raised mountain chains, constructed islands and shaped the topography of the earth. The entire ocean floor has a basement of volcanic basalt.
C)Volcanoes have not only made the continents, they are also thought to have made the world’ s first stable atmosphere and provided all the water for the oceans, rivers and ice-caps.
D)There are now about 600 active volcanoes. Every year they add two or three cubic kilometres of rock to the continents. Imagine a similar number of volcanoes smoking away for the last 3,500 million years. That is enough rock to explain the continental crust.
E)What comes out of volcanic craters is mostly gas. More than 90% of this gas is water vapour from the deep earth: enough to explain, over 3,500 million years, the water in the oceans. The rest of the gas is nitrogen, carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide, methane, ammonia and hydrogen. The quantity of these gases, again multiplied over 3,500 million years, is enough to explain the mass of the world’ s atmosphere. We are alive because volcanoes provided the soil, air and water we need.
F)Geologists consider the earth as having a molten core, surrounded by a semi-molten mantle and a brittle, outer skin. It helps to think of a soft-boiled egg with a runny yolk, a firm but squishy white and a hard shell. If the shell is even slightly cracked during boiling, the white material bubbles out and sets like a tiny mountain chain over the crack—like an archipelago of volcanic islands such as the Hawaiian Islands. But the earth is so much bigger and the mantle below is so much halter.
G)Even though the mantle rocks are kept solid by overlying pressure, they can still slowly "flow" like thick treacle. The flow, thought to be in the form of convection currents, is powerful enough to fracture the "eggshell" of the crust into plates, and keep them bumping and grinding against each other, or even overlapping, at the rate of a few centimetres a year. These fracture zones, where the collisions occur, are where earthquakes happen. And, very often, volcanoes.
H)These zones are lines of weakness, or hot spots. Every eruption is different, but put at its simplest, where there are weaknesses, rocks deep in the mantle, heated to 1,350°C, will start to expand and rise. As they do so, the pressure drops, and they expand and become liquid and rise more swiftly.
I)Sometimes it is slow: vast bubbles of magma—molten rock from the mantle— inch towards the surface, cooling slowly, to show through as granite extrusions(as on Skye, or the Great Whin Sill, the lava dyke squeezed out like toothpaste that carries part of Hadrian’ s Wall in northern England).
J)Sometimes—as in Northern Ireland, Wales and the Karoo in South Africa—the magma rose faster, and then flowed out horizontally on to the surface in vast thick sheets. In the Deccan plateau in western India, there are more than two million cubic kilometres of lava, some of it 2,400 metres thick, formed over 500,000 years of slurping eruption.
K)Sometimes the magma moves very swiftly indeed. It does not have time to cool as it surges upwards. The gases trapped inside the boiling rock expand suddenly, the lava glows with heat, it begins to froth, and it explodes with tremendous force. Then the slightly cooler lava following it begins to flow over the lip of the crater. It happens on Mars, it happened on the moon, it even happens on some of the moons of Jupiter and Uranus.
L)By studying the evidence, vulcanologists can read the force of the great blasts of the past. Is the pumice light and full of holes? The explosion was tremendous. Are the rocks heavy, with huge crystalline basalt shapes, like the Giant’ s Causeway in Northern Ireland? It was a slow, gentle eruption.
M)The biggest eruption are deep on the mid-ocean floor, where new lava is forcing the continents apart and widening the Atlantic by perhaps five centimetres a year. Look at maps of volcanoes, earthquakes and island chains like the Philippines and Japan, and you can see the rough outlines of what are called tectonic plates—the plates which make up the earth’s crust and mantle. The most dramatic of these is the Pacific "ring of fire" where there have the most violent explosions—Mount Pinatubo near Manila, Mount St Helen’ s in the Rockies and El Chicho n in Mexico about a decade ago, not to mention world-shaking blasts like Krakatoa in the Sunda Straits in 1883.
N)But volcanoes are not very predictable. That is because geological time is not like human time. During quiet periods, volcanoes cap themselves with their own lava by forming a powerful cone from the molten rocks slopping over the rim of the crater; later the lava cools slowly into a huge, hard, stable plug which blocks any further eruption until the pressure below becomes irresistible. In the case of Mount Pinatubo, this took 600 years.
O)Then, sometimes, with only a small warning, the mountain blows its top. It did this at Mont Pelee in Martinique at 7.49 a.m. on 8 May, 1902. Of a town of 28,000, only two people survived. In 1815, a sudden blast removed the top 1,280 metres of Mount Tambora in Indonesia. The eruption was so fierce that dust thrown into the stratosphere darkened the skies, canceling the following summer in Europe and North America. Thousands starved as the harvest failed, after snow in June and frosts in August. Volcanoes are potentially world news, especially the quiet ones. [br] The fracture zones are places of weakness, where earthquakes happen frequently.
选项
答案
H
解析
本题意为这些破碎的地区是脆弱带,也就是地震经常发生的地区。题干中lines of weakness为关键词,对应到文章H段These zones are lines of weakness.orhot spots.“这些区域正是脆弱带,也就是地震多发区。”题干中的where earthquakeshappen frequently是对原文hot spots的解释。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/2950179.html
相关试题推荐
Volcanoesaretheultimateearth-movingmachinery.Eruptionshaveriftedcon
Volcanoesaretheultimateearth-movingmachinery.Eruptionshaveriftedcon
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoes—Earth-shatteringNewsA)Volcanoesaretheultimate
Volcanoesaretheultimateearth-movingmachinery.Eruptionshaveriftedcon
随机试题
中国杂技(acrobatics)拥有超过3000年的历史,被誉为“东方艺术明珠”。观看中国杂技表演时.你会被深深地吸引,全神贯注、目不转睛。随着世界经济
Thisiswhatpeopletalkaboutwhentheytalkaboutthefuture.Theytalkab
某公路工程项目,直接费为9500万元,定额直接费为8000万元,设备购置费为20
下列建筑面层中,不能埋设管线的是( )。A.水泥混凝土面层 B.水磨石面层
成本是信息系统生命周期内各阶段的所有投入之和,按照成本性态分类,可以分为固定成本
咳嗽痰白,伴恶寒无汗,苔白,脉浮紧,辩证属:( )A.风热犯肺 B.风寒犯肺
项目经理在编制项目管理计划时,应()。A:越简单越好 B:越详细越好 C:
抗震设防烈度为7度的某高层办公楼,采用钢筋混凝土框架-剪力墙结构。当采用振型分解
(2020年真题)从中国取得股息所得的下列申请人,可直接判定为“受益所有人”的有
根据《建设工程监理规范》,下列内容中,不属于监理实施细则的是( )A、监理工作控
最新回复
(
0
)