Questions 10-11 are based on the following
passage. According to the theory of plate
tectonics, the lithosphere (earth’s relatively hard
and solid outer layer consisting of the crust and Line part
of the underlying mantle) is divided (5) into a few dozen
plates that vary in size and shape; in general, these plates
move in rela- tion to one another. They move away
from one another at a mid-ocean ridge, a long
chain of sub-oceanic mountains that forms a (10) boundary
between plates. At a mid-ocean ridge, new lithospheric material
in the form of hot magma pushes up from the earth’s
interior. The injection of this new lithos- pheric
material from below causes the phe- (15) nomenon known as
sea-floor spreading. Given that the earth is not
expanding in size to any appreciable degree, how can
"new" lithosphere be created at a mid-ocean ridge For
new lithosphere to come into (20) being in one region, an equal
amount of lithospheric material must be destroyed
somewhere else. This destruction takes place at a
boundary between plates called a sub- duction zone. At a
subduction zone, one (25) plate is pushed down under another
into the red-hot mantle, where over a span of mil-
lions of years it is absorbed into the mantle. It can be inferred from the passage that as new lithospheric material
is injected from below
A. the plates become immobilized in a kind of gridlock
B. it is incorporated into an underwater mountain ridge
C. the earth’s total mass is altered
D. it reverses its magnetic polarity
E. the immediately adjacent plates sink