- Thu Sep 30, 2021 1:52 pm
#90904
German.Steel,
The prephrase is not quite accurate. In the middle of the first paragraph, we see that some places with high levels of subduction are nearly free of earthquakes. So it's not straightforwardly true that places with high levels of subduction have the most earthquakes - places with high levels of subduction also have few if any earthquakes. I think the issue here is a confusion between two very different statements:
1. "Most earthquakes occur in places with high levels of subduction."
vs
2. "Places with high levels of subduction have the most earthquakes."
The first is true and the second not necessarily true. 1 is true because, if we look at earthquakes, we'll find most of them in places with high levels of subduction. 2 isn't necessarily true because, if we choose a place with a high level of subduction, it may very well be a place with a high level of subduction that is nearly free of earthquakes. So there's no expectation that a majority of arears with high levels of subduction are places with high levels of earthquakes. If anything, the difference between the two statements is like the difference between two "most" statements that are in the opposite order.
Thus, answer choice (D) is a Shell Game wrong answer. It looks good, but it's not talking about the right class of things. Talking about earthquakes is good, but not about areas, because we don't know if most high-subduction areas are actually where we find the earthquakes (the high-subduction and earthquake-prone areas might be a small minority of all the high-subduction areas).
Robert Carroll