- Tue Oct 20, 2015 11:00 pm
#34870
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus contains a fact set. Do not let the hard science topic discourage you: this is actually a relatively easy question, once you simplify the language in the stimulus.
Scientists observed that lightning could produce amino acids, the building blocks of life, but only in a “reducing atmosphere” (i.e. one rich in hydrogen and lean in oxygen):
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If meteorite impacts at the time life began temporarily created a reducing atmosphere around the impact site, then it is possible that lightning produced the first amino acids at the site of such impacts. This answer choice is consistent with the proposition that Earth’s atmosphere was not a reducing atmosphere at that time, and it also allows the scientists’ current belief to be correct.
Answer choice (B): Even if a single amino acid could have been sufficient to begin the formation of life on Earth, it is still unclear how that amino acid was produced in the first place. The fact remains that there was no reducing atmosphere at that time, which—according to the stimulus—is a necessary condition for lightning to produce amino acids.
Answer choice (C): Whether Earth’s atmosphere has changed since life first began is entirely irrelevant and does not explain the paradox described in the stimulus. Even if a reducing atmosphere were present at a later time, this would not explain how lightning produced the first amino acids on Earth.
Answer choice (D): The relative frequency of lightning at the time life began has no bearing on the paradox described in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This may seem like an attractive answer choice, because it suggests one possible way for life to have begun on Earth: the first amino acids were brought in by asteroids from outer space. Recall, however, that your job is to explain not how life began on Earth, but how lightning could have produced the first amino acids. This is a typical Shell Game answer, explaining a different paradox than the described by the author.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus contains a fact set. Do not let the hard science topic discourage you: this is actually a relatively easy question, once you simplify the language in the stimulus.
Scientists observed that lightning could produce amino acids, the building blocks of life, but only in a “reducing atmosphere” (i.e. one rich in hydrogen and lean in oxygen):
- Lightning produce amino acids Reducing atmosphere
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If meteorite impacts at the time life began temporarily created a reducing atmosphere around the impact site, then it is possible that lightning produced the first amino acids at the site of such impacts. This answer choice is consistent with the proposition that Earth’s atmosphere was not a reducing atmosphere at that time, and it also allows the scientists’ current belief to be correct.
Answer choice (B): Even if a single amino acid could have been sufficient to begin the formation of life on Earth, it is still unclear how that amino acid was produced in the first place. The fact remains that there was no reducing atmosphere at that time, which—according to the stimulus—is a necessary condition for lightning to produce amino acids.
Answer choice (C): Whether Earth’s atmosphere has changed since life first began is entirely irrelevant and does not explain the paradox described in the stimulus. Even if a reducing atmosphere were present at a later time, this would not explain how lightning produced the first amino acids on Earth.
Answer choice (D): The relative frequency of lightning at the time life began has no bearing on the paradox described in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This may seem like an attractive answer choice, because it suggests one possible way for life to have begun on Earth: the first amino acids were brought in by asteroids from outer space. Recall, however, that your job is to explain not how life began on Earth, but how lightning could have produced the first amino acids. This is a typical Shell Game answer, explaining a different paradox than the described by the author.