Hi, Jax,
Good question! Let's summarize this argument:
- P1: A species of iguana inhabits islands off Australia and nowhere else.
P2: These iguanas are related to American iguanas.
P3: The islands formed long after the fragmentation of the supercontinent that included both Australia and South America.
C: The iguanas floated to these islands from the Americas.
The task is to weaken this argument. In other words, we want to find a statement that would provide evidence that maybe the iguanas did not come to the islands from the Americas.
For prephrasing, let's consider some possibilities. Could these iguanas have predated the breakup of the supercontinent and just remained on these islands afterward? No, this doesn't work because the islands formed long after the continent's breakup.
Thus, the iguanas must have come there from somewhere else. The author contends that the iguanas came from the Americas. We need to find evidence that perhaps the iguanas didn't come from the Americas.
This is what answer choice (D) suggests might be possible. In finding evidence of extinct related Australian iguanas, the author raises the possibility that the erstwhile species of iguana migrated over not from the Americas but from Australia.
I hope this helps!