- Thu Sep 16, 2021 12:28 pm
#90440
relona,
The problem with your reasoning is that the evaporated seawater is not all returning to the ocean. Some of it is trapped as ice on ice caps. So the evaporated seawater contains a disproportionate amount of oxygen 16, and that water doesn't all return to the ocean, since some is trapped as ice. So the ocean has had its oxygen 16 depleted a bit and doesn't get it all back, since some is trapped in ice. So the ocean is being relatively depleted of oxygen 16 without replenishment; relative depletion of oxygen 16 means a greater share of oxygen 18 than before, which is what answer choice (B) says.
Robert Carroll
The problem with your reasoning is that the evaporated seawater is not all returning to the ocean. Some of it is trapped as ice on ice caps. So the evaporated seawater contains a disproportionate amount of oxygen 16, and that water doesn't all return to the ocean, since some is trapped as ice. So the ocean has had its oxygen 16 depleted a bit and doesn't get it all back, since some is trapped in ice. So the ocean is being relatively depleted of oxygen 16 without replenishment; relative depletion of oxygen 16 means a greater share of oxygen 18 than before, which is what answer choice (B) says.
Robert Carroll