Identificando linking words 9º "A" e "B"
Escola Estadual Professor Marcilon Dorneles
Disciplina: Inglês
Professor: Vinícius
Data: 28/04/20
Série: 9º
*Encontre e destaque
(circule ou passe um marca-texto) as linking words presentes na matéria da
revista ScienceDaily. Use o material explicativo sobre linking words enviado
nas aulas anteriores para ajudar a responder. Não é necessário traduzir o
texto, apenas identificar as linking words presentes nele.
New geochemical tool reveals
origin of Earth's nitrogen
Nitrogen is the most abundant gas in the atmosphere, and is the primary
component of the air we breathe. Nitrogen is also found in rocks, including
those tucked deep within the planet's interior. Until now, it was difficult to
distinguish between nitrogen sources coming from air and those coming from
inside the Earth's mantle when measuring gases from volcanoes.
"We found that air contamination was masking the pristine 'source
signature' of many volcanic gas samples," says WHOI geochemist Peter
Barry, a coauthor of the study.
Without that distinction, scientists weren't able to answer basic
questions like: Is nitrogen left over from Earth's formation or was it
delivered to the planet later on? How is nitrogen from the atmosphere related
to nitrogen coming out of volcanoes?
Barry and lead author Jabrane Labidi of UCLA, now a researcher at
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, worked in partnership with
international geochemists to analyze volcanic gas samples from around the globe
-- including gases from Iceland and Yellowstone National Park -- using a new
method of analyzing "clumped" nitrogen isotopes. This method provided
a unique way to identify molecules of nitrogen that come from air, which
allowed the researchers to see the true gas compositions deep within Earth's
mantle. This ultimately revealed evidence that nitrogen in the mantle has most
likely been there since our planet initially formed.
"Once air contamination is accounted for, we gained new and
valuable insights into the origin of nitrogen and the evolution of our
planet," Barry says.
While this new method helps scientists understand the origins of
volatile elements on Earth, it may prove useful as a way of monitoring the
activity of volcanoes, too. This is because the composition of gases bellowing
from volcanic centers change prior to eruptions. It could be that the mix of
mantle and air nitrogen could one day be used as a signal of eruptions.
This study was supported by the Deep Carbon Observatory and the Alfred
P. Sloan Foundation. The research team also included colleagues David Bekaert
and Mark Kurz from WHOI, scientists from several other U.S.-based universities,
and from France, Canada, Italy, the United Kingdom and Iceland.
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