Asked by Cheesecake
Crystal Caves of Mexico
While excavating a tunnel under Mexico's Naica Mountain, silver miners were stunned to discover a cavern full of luminous, elongated underground crystals. Composed of the mineral gypsum, some of the crystals extended as far as thirty-six feet into the air. What accounted for these amazing mineral structures? Millions of years ago, volcanic eruptions released a large amount of mineral-rich water into the cave, now known as the Cave of Crystals. One of those minerals was anhydrite, which slowly changes into gypsum when exposed to water. Originally, the cave was too hot for this change to take place. Eventually, however, the temperature cooled to about 136°F, and gypsum crystals began to form. This process continued as the temperature and other conditions in the cave remained constant for thousands of years.
1. Gigantic crystals in Mexico's Cave of Crystals were discovered by silver miners who were excavating a tunnel.
2. Specific conditions in the Cave of Crystals led to the development of the enormous crystal structures found there.
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1. True — the passage says silver miners discovered the cavern while excavating a tunnel under Naica Mountain.
2. True — the passage explains that mineral-rich water, the anhydrite→gypsum transformation, a cooling to about 136°F, and stable conditions over thousands of years produced the enormous gypsum crystals.
2. True — the passage explains that mineral-rich water, the anhydrite→gypsum transformation, a cooling to about 136°F, and stable conditions over thousands of years produced the enormous gypsum crystals.
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