Hi there NeverMissing,
This is a good example of an Error of Composition/Division flaw.
"Only if the level of greenhouse gases were higher 3 billion years ago than it is today would Earth have retained enough heat to keep the oceans from freezing" can be diagrammed as NO FREEZE
higher level of greenhouse gases.
We're told that the oceans did not freeze. So we can infer that the level of greenhouse gasses were higher.
But the author doesn't stop there. The author infers that
carbon dioxide was significantly higher. But carbon dioxide is just one greenhouse gas, like methane. We can't infer that because the overall level of greenhouse gases was higher, that any particular element was higher. So it's an Error of Composition/Division.
We're being asked to weaken this conclusion, which we can do in a couple of ways. We can show that there's ANOTHER element of greenhouse gases that was higher back then (or is lower now, which means the same thing). You can show that carbon dioxide is a very small percentage of the total level of greenhouse gases. Or you can have an answer choice that shows that carbon dioxide was lower or the same level back then. Basically, you want an answer choice that shows how even though the level of greenhouse gases was higher 3 billion years ago, that doesn't mean carbon dioxide was higher back then.
Answer choice (B) does this by showing that methane was higher back then, which would have increased the total level of greenhouse gases without any change in levels of carbon dioxide.