- Mon Apr 08, 2024 10:59 am
#105927
Hey Will,
The stimulus here specifically says that spikes in sulfur dioxide are the indicator for volcanoes and it adds the clarification of 'short-term.'
Answer choice (D), in contrast, says there are traces of sulfur dioxide from past eruptions. If (D) were true, all it tells us is that there is probably also trace sulfur dioxide in Venus's atmosphere, since there were signs of past volcanic activity there. We still don't know what to make of the short-term spike in sulfur dioxide. Also, the reasoning the scientist uses for why we shouldn't look at volcanoes as the cause of the spike is that no active volcanoes have been identified on Venus, and planetary atmospheres undergo cyclical variations in composition. Therefore, if we wanted to strengthen this argument, we would need to explain why these two factors are sufficient for us to rule out volcanoes.