Question
Module Two - Fire Awareness What makes up the fire tetrahedron? Drag and drop the correct answer to the correct space. Ice __
Answer
4
(348 Votes)
Xanthe
Expert · Tutor for 3 years
Answer
This question seems to include errors or parts that may have been omitted. It mentions "Ice," which is certainly not an element of the fire tetrahedron. Further categorization of "Incorrect" or "Correct" areas is also missing, making the handling of the "Drag and Drop" element indicated in the question not feasible. Thus, an accurate answer can't be derived, given the current question scenario provided.
Explanation
## Step 1:The fire tetrahedron represents the four crucial components needed for a fire to ignite, sustain, and continue. So we should first recall these components to answer the question.### The four components are:1. **Oxygen**: Fires need an ample supply of oxygen, which is generally provided by the ambient air, to ignite and burn efficiently.2. **Heat**: A source of heat is obligatory to start a fire. The source could be a variety of things like a spark, open flames, high-temperature surfaces, etc.3. **Fuel**: Fuel is any combustible substance that burns in the presence of an oxidizing substance like oxygen. It could be wood, oil, gas, etc., consistent with the context.4. **Chemical Chain Reaction**: Once a fire flares, a chemical chain reaction occurs. It continuously generates heat, decomposing the material further to release gases which sustain the burning until interrupted or the fuel exhausts.## Step 2:Review if the components provided by the question match the required components to make up a fire tetrahedron. It just mentions "Ice," which doesn't fit into the model. Realize that ice is, actually, a potential fire suppressant rather than a fire-causing component.