Reading comp PrepTest 125 · Section 1 · Question 11
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Science
Passage A
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Purposes of drilling muds
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- List of many purposes
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Ingredients of drilling muds
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- Bentonite + others
- Largest ingredient - Barite
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Formulas and problem
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- Companies have proprietary formulas
- Problem - Studying impact since formulas are hidden, have different names for ingredients...
Passage B
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Background and concern
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- Background on drilling mud
- Discharge of drilling mud - Main environmental concern
- Regulated and monitored
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- One type of mud - WBM - Safer
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- Water-Based Mud (WBM) - Safer, shallow drills, dumped
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Another type of mud - OBM - Compared to WBM - Regulations
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
- Oil-Based Mud (OBM) - Deeper wells, more dangerous
- Compared to WBM - Don’t disperse as readily, more oil, more barite
- Barite can hurt sea creatures
- Regulations on dumping
Main Points:
Passage A - Drilling muds have many purposes, are made up of certain chemicals, and have different formulas for different companies, which has presented problems in studying their effects.
Passage B - The release of WBMs is less harmful to the environment than OBMs, which is reflected in the stricter regulations facing the latter.
Key Lines?Passage A:
- Lines 2-3 - Introduce the purpose of Paragraph 1
- Lines 14-15 - Main ingredient
- Lines 23-26 - A problem is noted
Passage B:
- Lines 33-35 - A problem
- Lines 48-54 - Differences
Meta-Structure? Relationship Between Passages?
This is a weird set of passages in that they’re both largely informative - they don’t really have an argument or a point of view. Rather, we get information about drilling muds in both. There’s some overlap - they both talk about the compositions of drilling muds - but also a lot of information that’s unique to one passage - e.g., Passage A’s discussion of the purpose of drilling muds. Since these passages are largely devoid of viewpoints, we should expect the questions to bring up the details, which means that knowing what information is present in each passage is going to be important.
Problem/Solution - Both passages bring up environmental concerns from the dumping of drilling muds. Passage A talks about the “effects of drilling waste discharges” since they have “sometimes toxic” ingredients (Lines 24-26), and Passage B talks about how OBMs have “a greater potential for negative environmental impact” (Lines 52-53). Neither offers a solution other than regulating these products - these passages aren’t about a solution to it but rather just presenting the information about the drilling muds and the problems they post.
Lists (List of Differences)- Both passages include a list. Passage A lists a bunch of purposes of drilling muds in Paragraph 1; Passage B lists differences between OBMs and WBMs in Paragraph 3.
Last Thoughts?These passages are...boring, for lack of a better word. So it’d be easy to gloss over the information. And there’s also no reason to try to remember all of the key terms, as they’re not things that are familiar to you (bentonite, barite, polymers, etc…). Instead, know what type of information shows up where in each paragraph, and move to the questions as soon as possible so you can spend more time referring back to those details.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: C
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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AThe cost of certain Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) This is a tempting answer! However, there are a couple issues with it. First, there’s no indication that this means there will be a shift to deeper wells - maybe the cost of drilling mud is a negligible cost in the grand scheme of drilling oil wells (and the profits involved). Even if WBMs become much more expensive, it may still be a cost the companies are willing to take on. Leading us to the second problem - there’s no indication in this answer that the same won’t be true for OBMs. After all, we know that they have at least some of the same ingredients - maybe it’s those ones that will go up in price, driving the cost of both types of muds up.
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BThe deeper an offshore Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) (Line 50) Passage B does say that OBMs have more barite than WBMs. However, this answer provides no reason to believe that the higher barite concentration will lead to any shift in what types of muds are used!
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COil reserves at shallow Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C matches the stem
(C) (Lines 38-40; Lines 47-48) OBMs are used at deeper depths, and WBMs at shallower depths. If shallow oil reserves are largely tapped out, then that would suggest that they will shut down and new ones won’t open, shifting the proportion of active wells to deeper ones. Since those deeper ones would use OBM instead of WBM, this strengthens the argument that a shift to the former will happen in the future, making this the correct answer.
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DIt is unlikely that Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) This answer essentially says that something won’t change, so it’s not going to strengthen an argument that something will change.
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EBarite is a common Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) The use of OBMs vs. WBMs isn’t related to the availability of barite, even though the latter has more of it than the former. It’s related to depth. The availability of this key ingredient really doesn’t suggest that more OBMs will be used - it’d be like saying that there’s more than enough sugar out there, so American dessert habits will shift from cookies to candy. Also, in suggesting that barite won’t run out, this answer has a similar issue as (D) - it says something won’t change, so it’s not going to strengthen an argument that predicts a future change.
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