Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Regulators and scientists have usually learned about oil-drilling harms only after damage occurred, so rules came late. Early rules focused on protecting the oil, not the underground drinking water, and drilling can create a path that lets oil or salty water mix with shallow groundwater and pollute wells. Workers now use metal pipe casings and cement to block those paths, but we don’t know how well those barriers hold up over time—pipes can corrode and cement can break down, and things like bacteria or vibrations could cause failures. Even wells that follow rules can cause disasters if people misunderstand the underground layout, as a recent coastal spill showed, sparking calls for more research and better regulations.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the phrase in the last paragraph and identify which specific risks the author lists as arising from insufficient knowledge (e.g., barrier failure modes, unassessed environmental effects, and poor understanding of subsurface geology). Choose the option that best matches those risks.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.The author uses the phrase "the hazards of insufficient knowledge" (near the beginning of the last paragraph) primarily in order to refer to the risks resulting from
Correct Answer
B
The author uses "the hazards of insufficient knowledge" to refer to risks that arise from not understanding the geological and technical consequences of drilling. Support from the passage: the long-term stability of protective barriers "is unknown," and "The protective barrier may fail due to corrosion of the casing by certain fluids... or because of dissolution of the cement by these fluids. The effects of groundwater bacteria, traffic vibrations, and changing groundwater chemistry are likewise unassessed." The passage also describes a disaster that occurred because "a well's location was based on a poor understanding of the area's subsurface geology," which led to widespread contamination. These statements show the phrase primarily refers to failure to comprehend possible consequences of drilling in complex geologic systems, matching choice B.
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