Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT132 S1 P1 Q8 Explanation

Lichenometry

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsApplicationScience

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Passage

To study centuries-old earthquakes and the geologic faults that caused them, seismologists usually dig trenches along visible fault lines, looking for sediments that show evidence of having shifted. Using radiocarbon dating, they measure the quantity of the radioactive isotope carbon 14 present in wood or other organic material trapped in the sediments and frequency of past earthquakes and provide hints about the likelihood and location of future earthquakes.

Geologists William Bull and Mark Brandon have recently developed a new method, called lichenometry, for detecting and dating past earthquakes. Bull and Brandon developed the method based on the fact that large earthquakes generate numerous simultaneous rockfalls in mountain ranges that are sensitive to seismic shaking. Instead of dating fault-line sediments, lichenometry by mapping these rockfalls, since they decrease in abundance as the distance from the epicenter increases.

Lichenometry has distinct advantages over radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon dating is accurate only to within plus or minus 40 years, because the amount of the carbon 14 isotope varies naturally in the environment depending on the intensity of the radiation striking Earth’s upper atmosphere. Additionally, this intensity has fluctuated greatly during the past growth, and conditions like shade and wind that promote faster lichen growth must be factored in.

What this question is testing

Application

Topic

The author is introducing a clever new way to figure out when past earthquakes happened — using the size of lichens growing on rocks.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy.

Main Point

The simpler version: scientists used to date past earthquakes by digging trenches and using carbon-14 dating on organic material in shifted dirt. Two geologists (Bull and Brandon) came up with a new approach: when earthquakes happen, rocks fall, and lichens — which grow slowly but steadily — start growing on the newly exposed rock. Measure the biggest lichen on a boulder, and you know roughly when the rock fell. The new method is more accurate than carbon dating (within 10 years vs. 40), though it has its own quirks.

P1: The old way

Dig along faults; carbon-date the organic material trapped in shifted sediments.

P2: The new way

Earthquakes shake rocks loose. Lichens then start growing on those rocks at a known rate. Measure the biggest lichen and you've dated the earthquake. Find lots of same-age rockfalls in one region and you've found an earthquake; map them and you find the epicenter.

P3: Why it's better — but not perfect

Carbon dating is only accurate to ±40 years, and the last 300 years are especially noisy. Lichenometry can hit ±10 years. Catch: it works best within the last 500 years, you have to pick the right sites, and you have to factor in things that affect lichen growth.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
8.

Given the information in the passage, to which one of the following would lichenometry likely

Answer choices

  1. Contradiction3% picked this

    identifying the number of times a particular river has flooded in the

    The problem with counting floods is that each flood would destroy evidence of previous ones. A better application of lichenometry would be to count the time since the last flood.

  2. Contradiction6% picked this

    identifying the age of a fossilized skeleton of a mammal that lived many thousands

    Thousands of years is beyond the 500-year limit to the useful application of lichenometry.

  3. Unsupported Relationship8% picked this

    identifying the age of an ancient beach now underwater approximately 30 kilometers off

    The passage states that lichens grow on newly exposed rock in mountain ranges, but it does not state that lichens grow on recently submerged beaches.

  4. Correct67% picked this

    identifying the rate, in kilometers per century, at which a glacier has been receding up

    Why this is right

    Receding glaciers share the characteristic of measuring time since rock has become newly exposed (second paragraph).

    Skill tested: Application · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  5. Out of Scope16% picked this

    identifying local trends in annual rainfall rates in a particular valley over the

    The effects on lichens of changing rates of rainfall are not discussed in the passage.

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