2 good LSAT for u to taste
1. The male sage grouse has air sacs that when not inflated, lie hidden beneath the grouse's neck feathers. During its spring courtship ritual, the male sage grouse inflates these air sacs and displays them to the female sage grouse. Some scientists hypothesize that this courtship ritual serves as a means for female sage grouse to select healthy mates.
Which one of the following, if rue, most strongly supports the scientists' hypothesis?
(A) Some female sage grouse mate with unhealthy male sage grouse.
(B) When diseased ,ale sage grouse were treated with antibiotics, they were not selected by female sage grouse during the courtship ritual.
(C) Some healthy male sage are prone to parasitic infections that exhibit symptoms visible on the birds air sacs.
(D) Male sage grouse are prone to parasitic infections that exhibit symptoms visible on the birds' air sacs.
(E) The sage grouse is commonly afflicted with a strain of malaria that tends to change as the organism that causes it undergoes mutation.
2。At night, a flock of crows will generally perch close together in a small place---often a piece of wooded land---called a roost. Each morning, the crows leave the roost and fan out in small groups to hunt and scavenge the surrounding area. For most flocks, the crow's hunting extends as far as 100 to 130 kilometers(60 to 80 miles) from the roost. Normally, a flock will continue to occupy the same roost for several consecutive years, and when it abandons a roost site for a new one the new roost is usually less than eight kilometers (five miles) away.
Of the following claims, which one can most justifiably be rejected on the basis of the statement above?
(A) Crows will abandon their roost site only in response to increase in the population of the flock.
(B) When there is a shortage of food in the area in which a flock of crows normally hunts and scavenges, some members of the flock will begin to hunt and scavenge outside that area.
(C) Most of the hunting and scavenging that crows do occurs more than eight kilometers (five miles) from their roost.
(D) Once a flock of crows has settled on a new roost site, it is extremely difficult to force it to abandon that site for another.
(E) When a flock of crows moves to a new roost site, it generally does so because the area in which it has hunted and scavenged has been depleted of food sources. |