The stability of silica polymorphs under varying pressure is a crucial concept in geology, particularly within the study of mineral phase transitions. Silica, or silicon dioxide (SiO2), exists in several polymorphic forms, each stable under particular temperatures and pressures. These polymorphs include Quartz, Tridymite, Coesite, and Stishovite.
Let's elucidate the order of these polymorphs with respect to stability under increasing pressure:
Thus, the stability order under increasing pressure is: Quartz – Coesite – Stishovite.
Tridymite is another polymorphic form of silica that is stable at high temperatures but low pressures, and it does not contribute as significantly to the stability under increasing pressure.
Among the given options, the correct orders that reflect the stability sequence with increasing pressure are:
The following diagram represents a binary phase diagram for the system A–B at atmospheric pressure. If ‘X’ is the initial composition of melt, then the amount of melt that converts to solid when the magma cools from 1400 °C to 1250 °C is ________ %. (Round off to two decimal places.) 
A melt containing 900 moles of anorthite and 100 moles of diopside undergoes crystallization. The number of moles of anorthite that crystallize as the melt composition moves from P to Q is .......... 