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- Tue Oct 02, 2018 12:59 pm
#59028
The key to the entire problem is in the stimulus (as always!). In particular the scientists' hypothesis is quite pointed: "it is the burrowing activities of these termites that cause the circles to form" (italics added). The question stem then asks you to support this hypothesis, and the key to correctly choosing (A) is to realize it is the only answer that addresses "burrowing." This is critical because most students head into the answers simply trying to prove that termites and fairy circles are linked; that's not enough here, and you need an answer that links burrowing with the circles.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer. Note that the discussion of damage here centers on the roots, which helps support the idea that the burrowing activity is connected to these circles.
The elements we have present—burrowing and lack of vegetation in the circles per the stimulus, and new circles with plants dying just at the roots in (A)—look to me (and the test makers) like a viable connection. But again, you aren't looking to prove the argument or even make it extremely strong; you just need to support it in some way. For me at least, I believe the connection is strong enough to qualify as more than just compatible. It adds another piece that would be an effect of the burrowing, and this adds a piece of support to it.
Answer choice (B): It's not a likely scenario that climate is causing unique circles to form in the desert, and to think this rules out an alternate cause is something that LSAC would say is too tenuous of a connection. Even interpreted in the best possible light, this answer would require further assumptions (such as the grasses inside the circles are for some unknown reason less able to survive these conditions than the grasses outside the circles) and be far more indirect than answer choice (A)'s direct support of the termite burrowing explanation.
Answer choice (C). This answer, like (B), would at best make an indirect case for supporting the argument. And, like (B) it requires further assumptions because it simply discusses relative water content, but that is no indication that the water content inside the fairy circles was ever insufficient (meaning, a "higher content" doesn't mean that previous the water content was too low to support grasses).
The argument that LSAC would make here is that (A) links the direct cause (burrowing) to what is occurring; (B) and (C) require further assumptions to properly play the role of knocking out alternate causes.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer. Note that the discussion of damage here centers on the roots, which helps support the idea that the burrowing activity is connected to these circles.
The elements we have present—burrowing and lack of vegetation in the circles per the stimulus, and new circles with plants dying just at the roots in (A)—look to me (and the test makers) like a viable connection. But again, you aren't looking to prove the argument or even make it extremely strong; you just need to support it in some way. For me at least, I believe the connection is strong enough to qualify as more than just compatible. It adds another piece that would be an effect of the burrowing, and this adds a piece of support to it.
Answer choice (B): It's not a likely scenario that climate is causing unique circles to form in the desert, and to think this rules out an alternate cause is something that LSAC would say is too tenuous of a connection. Even interpreted in the best possible light, this answer would require further assumptions (such as the grasses inside the circles are for some unknown reason less able to survive these conditions than the grasses outside the circles) and be far more indirect than answer choice (A)'s direct support of the termite burrowing explanation.
Answer choice (C). This answer, like (B), would at best make an indirect case for supporting the argument. And, like (B) it requires further assumptions because it simply discusses relative water content, but that is no indication that the water content inside the fairy circles was ever insufficient (meaning, a "higher content" doesn't mean that previous the water content was too low to support grasses).
The argument that LSAC would make here is that (A) links the direct cause (burrowing) to what is occurring; (B) and (C) require further assumptions to properly play the role of knocking out alternate causes.
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/