Library/PT 151/Sec 1/Reading Comp
Go to Platform
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

Link the warning about 'seismically innocuous' low-subduction regions to the earlier explanation that shallow-angle subduction increases plate contact and friction; choose the option that states shallow descent produces earthquake-producing friction.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

Unlock Full Passage

25.

Based on the information in the passage, which one of the following sentences would most logically complete the last paragraph?

Correct Answer
E
Option E correctly completes the paragraph by stating the mechanism that makes even low-subduction regions risky: a shallow-angle descent increases the plane of contact and thus earthquake-producing friction. The passage says: "On the other hand, in collisions in which the plates move toward each other the subducted plate receives relatively little resistance from the mantle, and so its angle of descent is correspondingly shallow, allowing for a much larger plane of contact between the two plates." It also says: "Like two sheets of sandpaper pressed together, these plates offer each other a great deal of resistance." And the warning paragraph states that "regions with low levels of subduction may in fact be at a significant risk of earthquakes, depending on the nature of the subduction taking place." E ties these sentences together by explicitly noting that a shallow-angle descent "is likely to cause a great deal of earthquake-producing friction," which is the causal link the passage uses to explain seismic risk.
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
Explore Perfection Plus for full LSAT prep