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
Locate the sentence describing same-direction collisions and note which plate is overtaking and which edge is subducted (leading vs. trailing).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.According to the passage, what results when two plates moving in the same direction collide?
Correct Answer
D
The passage states that in same-direction collisions 'the second plate's motion is simply faster than that of the first, and its leading edge therefore becomes subducted.' It also explains that the 'overtaking plate encounters great resistance from the mantle and is forced to descend steeply.' These lines indicate that the faster (overtaking) plate's leading edge is subducted under the slower-moving plate, which matches choice D.
Upgrade Your Prep
Ready to go beyond free explanations?
LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.
Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal