Library/PT 125/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Drilling muds are thick liquids used while drilling oil wells to cool and lubricate the drill, carry rock bits to the surface, give drillers information about conditions downhole, and keep the hole from collapsing. They’re made mostly from clays and a heavy mineral called barite and can include many different (sometimes secret) additives, which makes it hard to study their environmental effects. Offshore, muds and the rock cuttings are the main pollution concern and are tightly regulated: water-based muds used near the surface are fairly harmless and often recycled then dumped, while oil-based muds used for deep drilling contain mineral oil and more barite, don’t disperse well, can harm sea life, and are only allowed to be discharged in limited, cleaned-up amounts.

Logic Breakdown

Scan Passage B for the explicit comparison between OBMs and WBMs; the passage directly states why OBMs pose greater environmental risk (look for wording about dispersal and composition).

Passage Stimulus

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12.

According to passage B, one reason OBMs are potentially more environmentally damaging than WBMs is that OBMs

Correct Answer
A
Passage B directly states that WBM "is not particularly toxic to marine organisms and disperses readily," and that "OBMs have a greater potential for negative environmental impact, partly because they do not disperse as readily." These explicit sentences identify slower dispersal of OBMs as a reason for their greater potential environmental damage, which matches choice A.
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