riabobiia wrote: ↑Wed Dec 06, 2023 4:35 pm
Hi!
I'm still a bit confused about answer choice A vs answer choice D. If there are "no known anthra fossils that predate lizard fossils" then doesn't that imply that the anthra fossils that predate lizard fossils are unknown?
What is the difference in the fossils being unknown and known? I think the wording of the question stem + the answer is what's bending my brain.
Or does "no known" in answer choice D imply that there is still evidence out there, we just haven't found it yet?
Hi Ria,
For sure, the repetition in phrasing in this question makes it tricky. First, let's break down the question.
Conclusions: Lizards could not have evolved from anthracosaurs.
Why?: We don't have anthracosaur fossils older than 300 million years, but we just found a lizard fossil that is 340 million years ago. A species (lizard) cannot be evolved from a species (anthracosaur) it came before.
For this conclusion to make sense from the premise, the author needs to assume that there are no anthracosaur fossils that would be older than 340 million years. This is what answer choice (A) gets at. The author is assuming that anthracosaur fossils older than 340 million years will never be discovered.
Answer choice (D) states something that the argument does not assume. Answer choice (D) says "there are no known anthracosaur fossils that predate some lizards." This is not an assumption - this is stated in the stimulus itself.
Let me know if that helps!