Hi, ActionJackson,
Good questions. First, let's talk extreme language in Must Be True answer choices. The presence of extreme language in a Must Be True answer choice should indeed raise a red flag for you. When you see it, you should go, "Whoa! Watch out there. My first instinct is to call it a Loser."
However, extreme language does not in and of itself make an answer choice wrong. Consider the following hypothetical:
- All milk cows are black and white. All milk cows are mammals. Farmer Joe has ten milk cows in his barn.
Now here's a valid inference:
- No black and white milk cows are not mammals.
Notice there is extreme language here, but it is warranted and supported by the information in the stimulus. Therefore, when you encounter extreme language it should raise flags, as mentioned above, but you need not (and cannot) get rid of it entirely just on the basis of extreme language. If the extreme language makes the answer choice unsupported, adios! But if the extreme language is supported by adequate evidence in the stimulus, it can be present in a credited response.
In this question, the statement in Answer Choice (A) is actually supported by the stimulus. Given that:
- (1) The discovery of microdiamonds sheds light on how long it took for the Earth's crust to form.
AND
(2) Microdiamonds' age dates to a time 300 million years after the formation of the Earth.
We can infer properly that the Earth's crust must have been in some state of formation 300 million years after the formation of the Earth itself. Consider the logical negation of the statement in Answer Choice (A):
- *The Earth's crust took longer than 300 million years to start to form.*
If this were true, then (1) ("The discovery of microdiamonds sheds light on how long it took for the Earth's crust to form.") could not be true. It would be a nonsensical statement.
Therefore, Answer Choice (A) does have adequate support in the stimulus and is the credited response.
Now Answer Choice (D) does in fact have its own issue with extreme language. We do not have adequate support for the statement that "Microdiamonds were the
first components of the Earth’s crust to form."
However, even in consideration of your proposal to change (D) to state that "Microdiamonds were
among the first components of the Earth’s crust to form," we still could not make this inference. It could still be possible that many other parts of the crust predated the formation of microdiamonds but these parts of the crust either no longer exist or are yet to be discovered.
Great questions. I hope this helps!