Library/PT 132/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Earthquake scientists usually dig trenches and use carbon-14 dating of buried wood to tell when past quakes happened, but carbon-14 can be off by about 40 years. Geologists Bull and Brandon suggest lichenometry: big quakes cause many rocks to fall, and slow-growing lichens quickly start on the fresh rock and expand at a steady rate (one species grows about 9.5 mm per 100 years), so the largest lichen on a boulder tells how long ago it fell. Many boulders with the same lichen age in an area suggest a single quake and help find its epicenter. Lichenometry can be more accurate (about ±10 years) but is best for events in the last 500 years and needs careful site choice and growth-rate checks to avoid errors from avalanches, shade, or wind.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Ask what must be true for the authors' recommendations—careful site selection, accurate calibration of lichen growth rates, and 'factoring' conditions like shade and wind—to allow lichenometry to produce accurate dates. Support from passage: 'They note, however, that using lichenometry requires careful site selection and accurate calibration of lichen growth rates, adding that the method is best used for earthquakes that occurred within the last 500 years.' and 'Sites must be selected to minimize the influence of snow avalanches and other disturbances that would affect normal lichen growth, and conditions like shade and wind that promote faster lichen growth must be factored in.'

Passage Stimulus

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6.

It can be inferred that the statements made by Bull and Brandon and reported in the last two sentences of the passage rely on which one of the following assumptions?

Correct Answer
E
The authors' advice to avoid disturbed sites and to 'factor in' shade and wind presupposes that investigators can determine the extent to which such factors have affected existing lichen colonies. Without the ability to detect or quantify how shade, wind, avalanches, or other disturbances altered lichen growth, one could not reliably select undisturbed sites or accurately calibrate growth rates—so the authors must assume that these effects can be determined. (Supported by the quoted sentences above.)
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