Earth's surface consists of rigid plates that are constantly shifting and jostling one another. Plate movements are the surface expressions of motions 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 tremendous pressure of the crust and 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 cooler material to the depths. When the edge of one plate bends under another and its cooler material is consumed in the mantle, volcanic activity occurs as molten lava rises from the downgoing plate and erupts through the overlying one.
Most volcanoes occur at plate boundaries. However, certain "misplaced" volcanoes far from plate edges result from a second, independent mechanism that cools the deep interior of Earth. Because of its proximity to Earth's core, the rock at the base of the mantle is much hotter than rock in the upper mantle. The hotter the mantle rock is, the less it resists flowing. Reservoirs of this hot rock collect in the base of the mantle. When a reservoir is sufficiently large, a sphere 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 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 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 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.
It can be inferred from the passage that a chain of volcanoes created by a mantle plume would most likely be characterized by
a curved outline
constituent volcanoes that differ from each other in age
occurrence near a plate boundary where one plate bends under another
appearance near many other volcanic chains
rocks with a wide range of chemical composition
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正确答案是 B。因为文章中的最后一句话“因为源头(mantle plume)保持不变而表面板块在不断移动,所以不久之后,一个正在运转的源头会创建一条火山链或者火山岛,记录了该源头与移动板块相对而停留的位置”显示出,造成这个火山链的火山岛拥有不同的年龄,对应答案中的 B 项。
这题解意出得好深阿!因为原文说到火山的位置不会变,但是地表板块块持续移动,所以「久而久之」就形成了一个火山带,所以火山带上不同的火山年龄都不同
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