Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
About 4 billion years ago the Moon was pummeled by lots of space debris in what scientists call the Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB). Researchers disagree about what caused it: some say a big asteroid or comet broke apart and scattered debris across the inner solar system; others say the Moon just shows the late phase of a long, slowly declining period of impacts; a third view says a short, local breakup in the Earth–Moon area produced the Moon's craters but did not affect other planets. A rock found on Earth that may have come from Mars and is dated to the same time suggests Mars was hit then too, which supports the idea that the bombardment affected more than just the Moon, but scientists need many more samples to be sure.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: pick the choice that provides direct evidence that other inner planets (e.g., Mars) did NOT experience an increase in impacts around 4 billion years ago. Relevant passage quotes: "A third group contends that the Moon's evidence supports the view that the LHB was a sharply defined cataclysmic cratering period, but these scientists believe that because of its relatively brief duration, this cataclysm did not extend throughout the inner solar system."; "It seems to be a rare example of a Mars rock that made its way to Earth after being knocked from the surface of Mars."; "To determine the pervasiveness of the LHB, scientists will need to locate many more such rocks and perhaps obtain surface samples from other planets in the inner solar system." Choice A supplies broad, direct evidence that Mars lacks an LHB signature and thus best supports the Earth–Moon–limited view.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Which one of the following, if true, would lend the most support to the view that the LHB was limited to Earth and the Moon?
Correct Answer
A
A is correct because it gives broad, independent evidence that Mars did not experience an increase in projectile impacts during the relevant interval (3–5 billion years ago). The passage identifies a Mars meteorite as the kind of evidence that would support an LHB extending beyond the Earth–Moon system and says many more such rocks/samples are needed to determine pervasiveness. A comprehensive crater survey finding little evidence of an impact spike on Mars directly undermines the idea that the LHB affected other inner planets and therefore most strongly supports the view that the LHB was limited to Earth and the Moon.
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