Library/PT 151/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The Earth’s crust is made of moving plates, and earthquakes usually happen where one plate is forced under another (subduction) and the plates grind against each other. Scientists noticed some places with lots of subduction but few quakes, and they explain this by how the plates move: when plates move toward each other the subducting plate sinks shallowly and stays in contact, creating lots of friction and earthquakes; when one plate overtakes another in the same direction it sinks steeply, touching less rock and producing fewer quakes. This idea also warns that areas that seem safe could still be risky depending on the type of subduction occurring there.

Logic Breakdown

Look for the passage's thesis: scientists propose that the difference between opposite-direction collisions and same-direction (overtaking) collisions explains why some high-subduction regions are seismically quiet.

Passage Stimulus

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22.

Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
'One group of scientists now proposes that the relative quiet of these zones is tied to the nature of the collision between the plates.' The passage explains that when plates move in the same direction one overtakes the other and 'the steep descent of the overtaking plate ... reduces the amount of contact between the two plates, and the earthquake-producing friction is thereby reduced as well,' whereas when plates move toward each other the descent is shallow and contact—and friction—are greater. Choice B succinctly and accurately states this proposed explanation for the rarity of earthquakes in some intensely subducting regions.
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