Question 43-52 are based on the following passage.
This passage is adapted from Richard A. Kerr, “New Look at
Ancient Mineral Could Scrap a Test for Early Oxygen.” Ó2014
by American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Geologists trying to sniff out signs of oxygen in Earth’s
early air have long struggled with a major obstacle
eons-old rocks that provide only a ragged, fragmentary
record of the gas. Even so, some have
5
for decades taken the presence of the mineral
hematite in a so-called banded iron formation (BIF) in
northwestern Australia as a sign that 2.5 billion years ago,
Earth’s atmosphere had at least a trace of oxygen. The
ruddy mineral was thought to record the
10
moment when photosynthesis first pushed oxygen to
levels high enough to fully oxidize iron. (Iron oxidation
occurs when iron combines with oxygen to form a new
compound, such as hematite.)
A study of that BIF, using the latest analytical
15
techniques, suggests that this rock record has been
misread. If this suggestion is true, oxygen actually may
have appeared in the atmosphere hundreds of millions
of years later than this BIF suggested. Geologists say
the study raises serious questions
20
about a supposedly reliable test. “People are
recognizing that we have to be more careful,” says
geochemist Timothy Lyons. “We need to increasingly
focus on doing just what (these authors) did a more careful
characterization of samples.”
25
In a paper in the
Geological Society of America
Bulletin, geologists Birger Rasmussen, BryanKrapez, and
Daniela Meier reanalyse the mineral makeup of the Dales
Gorge BIF, an ancient ocean bottom now
in western
Australia. Their original intent was to
30
explain how run-of-the-mill BIFs like Dales Gorge
turn into the iron-rich ores so heavily mined worldwide.
The team took 400 translucent slivers of Dales
Gorge rock from four deep-drill cores and
35
studied them with several kinds of modern optical
microscopes, as well as with a scanning electron
microscope equipped with an x-ray spectrometer for
element analysis. That let the researchers see where each
microscopic mineral in the rock formed and get
40
a sense of the order of their creation. Knowing the
conditions under which each mineral could form, the
researchers could tell a tale about conditions in the ocean
beneath which the BIF was first laid down - a time when
oxygen gas may have been making its
45
first, tentative appearance on Earth. Their more
detailed look at the rocks focused on
hematite, which consists of iron combined with as much
oxygen as iron’s bonds can hold. Because the Dales
Gorge BIF has plenty of oxygen-rich hematite,
50
earlier researchers concluded that oxygen gas from
the atmosphere must have already been dissolved in the
ocean and in the underlying sediments 2.5 billions years
ago, when the makings of this BIF first settled to the
ocean bottom.
55
But the Australian researchers see signs that the
BIF’s hematite appeared later. Other iron-rich
minerals—ones that, unlike hematite, form in the
absence of oxygen gas—were there in the original
seafloor sediments, the group argues. But they
60
conclude that this iron was probably not oxidized,
producing the hematite, until about 300 million years
later, after tectonic forces crumpled the sea floor into
mountains and drove oxygen-laden water down into the
rock. Given that western Australia hosts the
65
archetypal examples of BIFs in that early time,
Rasmussen says, the Dales Gorge formation
“probably records fundamental processes that also
affected other BIFs at some time on their history.”
Unauthorized copying or reuse of any part of this page is illegal. 16
Others are not ready to go quite that far. BIF
70
geologist Bruce Simonson praises the team’s “careful
study and reasonable conclusions” but adds that “it
would be premature to extrapolate their conclusions to
all BIFs everywhere.” Even so, both he and Lyons see
the new work as a warning shot. “Big stories [of
75
oxygen’s history] have been told by small amounts of
data,” Lyons says. Lately, “by being more careful,
we’re seeing a more nuanced, more coherent
picture.”
43
The author’s main purpose in writing about the recent
study of the Dales Gorge BIF is to
A) give a detailed view of the advanced techniques the
study employed.
B) chastise researchers for
relying too heavily on the
work of their predecessors.
C) suggest that scientific breakthroughs sometimes
happen by chance.
D) show how the study has led geologist to reconsider
certain assumptions.
44
Over the course of the passage, the
main focus shifts from
A) a challenge to a long-standing hypothesis to a
presentation of evidence in support of that hypothesis.
B) a discussion of a specific study to an exploration of its
potential applications.
C) an outline of an accepted theory to a discussion of a
study that challenged that
theory
D) a critique of a research method to support for the
method’s findings
45
As used in line 8, “trace” most nearly
means
A) established pattern
B) marked path
C) tiny amount
D)
direct route
46
The passage suggests that Lyons would most likely
characterize previous studies of BIFs as
A) dependent on weak methodology.
B) revolutionary in advancing geological theory.
C) completely disproven by later research.
D) provable with further experimentation.
Unauthorized copying or reuse of any part of this page is illegal. 17
47
Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to
the previous question?
A) Lines 1-4 (“Geologists … gas”)
B) Lines 9-13 (“The ruddy…. hematite”)
C) Lines 14-18 (“A study…. Suggested”)
D) Lines 20-24 (“People….samples”)
48
The purpose of the sentence in Lines 55-56 (“But …later.”)
is to
A) cast doubt on earlier research of BIF.
B) introduce the unexpected conclusion from the Dales
Gorge study.
C) show that the researchers are inherently biased
against the study.
D) provide evidence which is later proved
false
49
As used in line 41, “conditions” most nearly means
A) agreements
B) stipulations
C) circumstances
D)
qualifications
50
It can be reasonably inferred from the passage that
hematite
A) might never have formed in the Dales Gorge BIF
without the activity of tectonic forces.
B) most likely appeared on Earth earlier than previous
researchers believed.
C) is necessary for oceanic ecologies to flourish.
D) is solely found
on the floor of the ocean
51
Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to
the previous question?
A) Lines 38-40 (“That … creation”)
B) Lines 46-48 (“Their…hold”)
C) Lines 48-54 (“Because…bottom”)
D) Lines 59-64 (“But they …rock”)
52
The passage indicates that a possible weakness of the Dale
Gorge BIF study is that it
A) fails to consider alternative approaches
B) overstates the implications of its results
C) relies excessively on complicated technology
D) examines a sample that was too varied