- Mon Aug 03, 2020 5:58 pm
#77700
I'm not amazing at RC and I ended up with a wrong answer (C) on this passage, but here's how I found B as the answer on the second go-around:
(A). This can be eliminated because it assumes too much unstated information. We don't know that archaeology as a whole is expanding and we don't know how the field is changing in terms of cultural demands outside of placing more emphasis on studying ancient women and their crafts (which is pretty narrow).
(C). I fell for it, and 1 out of 5 test-takers did too, but C has a mis-stated relationship in it. C tells us research has advanced so much that we can now replicate ancient methods and production techniques. The passage does not tell us this. It is a new method, but we are never told that technology per se brought this about. This is also too narrow because it ignores the impact the new technology has outside of this effect.
(D). This is wrong for a similar reason as C. D tells us research into textiles revolutionized archaeology as a discipline by introducing applied technology and to re-evaluating 'useless' objects. But this relationship is either co-incidental or outright reversed. We're told this change happened before and possibly during this change in textile research, so it's not reasonable to assume textiles changed the field.
(E). This (like A) makes unwarranted claims. We are never told that reconstruction is more significant than radiocarbon or the other techniques. We may be given examples of reconstruction's success, but this is never given in a comparative sense to the new technological methods.
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So why B?
B acknowledges all of the new advances ("diversity of new approaches"). This includes the changes in archaeology as a discipline, the new tech, and reconstruction methods. We are also told about scant evidence existing in the field, which acknowledges the statements made in the first paragraph. Finally, we are told that with these conditions we are learning much from inference, which is demonstrated by radiocarbon dating, using isotopes to determine the source of textile materials, and recreation to solve the Athena statue mystery. This hits all the big highlights of the passage in a brief but succinct statement while also correctly stating the relationship.