A mountain goat is climbing to the top of a large cliff. The cliff is 50 feet higher than its starting point. If it takes the goat 22 minutes to climb this cliff, interpret the quotient to describe the rate of change in the goat's elevation. Give your answer to the nearest hundredth.

2.27

-2.33
1.58
-$416.67
-3.75

To find the rate of change in the goat's elevation, we need to divide the change in elevation by the time it took to climb. The change in elevation is 50 feet and the time it took to climb is 22 minutes. So the rate of change is 50 feet / 22 minutes = <<50/22=2.27>>2.27 feet/minute. Answer: \boxed{2.27}.

The answer is 2.27.

A bird is flying at an average altitude of 10 meters above the ground. After 3 seconds, it settles on a branch that is 3 meters above the ground. Interpret the quotient to describe the rate of change in the bird’s altitude. Give your answer to the nearest hundredth and remember that the bird is descending.(1 point)

3 differneces between the llama and the humans about the heart

To interpret the quotient describing the rate of change in the goat's elevation, we need to divide the change in elevation (50 feet) by the time it took to climb the cliff (22 minutes).

The rate of change in the goat's elevation is calculated as:
Rate of change = Change in elevation / Time

Rate of change = 50 feet / 22 minutes

To find the rate to the nearest hundredth, we can divide 50 by 22:
Rate of change ≈ 2.27 feet per minute

Therefore, the rate of change in the goat's elevation is approximately 2.27 feet per minute.

To interpret the quotient describing the rate of change in the goat's elevation, we need to calculate the average rate of change of the goat's elevation per minute.

First, we determine the change in the goat's elevation by subtracting its starting point from the top of the cliff: 50 feet - 0 feet = 50 feet.

Next, we calculate the rate of change (or the average speed) by dividing the change in elevation by the time it takes for the goat to climb the cliff: 50 feet / 22 minutes ≈ 2.27 feet per minute.

Therefore, we can interpret the quotient 2.27 to describe the rate of change in the goat's elevation as approximately 2.27 feet per minute.