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标题: 急问GWD 6-24 [打印本页]

作者: usdream    时间: 2004-9-14 10:18
标题: 急问GWD 6-24

Diamonds are almost impos-


            sible to detect directly because they


            are so rare:  very rich kimberlite


Line     pipes, the routes through which


  (5)      diamonds rise, may contain only


three carats of diamonds per ton


of kimberlite.  Kimberlite begins as


magma in Earth’s mantle (the layer


between the crust and the core).  As


(10)     the magma smashes through layers


of rock, it rips out debris, creating


a mix of liquid and solid material.


Some of the solid material it brings


up may come from a so-called


(15)     diamond-stability field, where condi-


tions of pressure and temperature


are conducive to the formation of


diamonds.  If diamonds are to sur-


vive, though, they must shoot toward


(20)     Earth’s surface quickly.  Otherwise,


            they revert to graphite or burn.


            Explorers seeking diamonds look


for specks of “indicator minerals”


peculiar to the mantle but carried up


(25)     in greater quantities than diamonds


and eroded out of kimberlite pipes


into the surrounding land.  The stan-


dard ones are garnets, chromites,


and ilmenites.  One can spend years


(30)     searching for indicators and tracing


them back to the pipes that are their


source; however, 90 percent of


            kimberlite pipes found this way are


barren of diamonds, and the rest


(35)    are usually too sparse to mine.


      In the 1970’s the process of


locating profitable pipes was refined


by focusing on the subtle differ-


ences between the chemical


(40)    signatures of indicator minerals


found in diamond-rich pipes as


opposed to those found in barren


pipes.  For example, G10 garnets,


a type of garnet typically found in


(45)     diamond-rich pipes, are lower in


calcium and higher in chrome than


garnets from barren pipes.  Geo-


chemists John Gurney showed that


garnets with this composition were


(50)     formed only in the diamond-stability


field; more commonly found ver-


sions came from elsewhere in the


mantle.  Gurney also found that


though ilmenites did not form in the


(55)     diamond-stability field, there was a


link useful for prospectors: when


the iron in ilmenite was highly


oxidized, its source pipe rarely


contained any diamonds.  He rea-


(60)     soned that iron took on more or less


oxygen in response to conditions in


the kimberlitic magma itself—mainly


in response to heat and the avail-


able oxygen.  When iron became


(65)     highly oxidized, so did diamonds;


that is, they vaporized into carbon


dioxide.


The passage suggests that the presence of G10 garnet in a kimberlite pipe indicates that


                        



  • the pipe in which the garnet is found has a 90% chance of containing diamonds


  • the levels of calcium and chrome in the pipe are conducive to diamond formation


  • the pipe passed through a diamond-stability field and thus may contain diamonds


  • any diamonds the pipe contains would not have come from the diamond-stability field


  • the pipe’s temperature was so high that it oxidized any diamonds the pipe might have contained



    Is the answer C?  But in the key list, the answer is B?


    Could anyone pls tell me which is correct?


    Thank you!



    作者: paladino    时间: 2004-9-14 16:19

    我选B。

    例子后面的内容是对前面的论点的证明。

    贫富矿的化学成分不同,后面举例 G10这种富矿产物 比贫矿含有少的钙,多的铬。


    作者: valarie    时间: 2004-9-17 04:35
    The key is C. Has been discussed. You go to GWD discussion links, you'll find the link. And this question is No.25 not No.24
    [此贴子已经被作者于2004-9-17 4:36:22编辑过]





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