- Tue May 10, 2016 6:17 pm
#24380
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (E)
This question asks you to weaken the asteroid impact theory, so you should look to critique the idea that an asteroid impact caused the extinctions.
Answer choice (A): The fact that some dinosaurs congregated closely does not have clear relevance to whether an asteroid strike would have caused the extinction, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): You should not assume that a theory about complete global extinction would be affected by the fact that some dinosaurs migrated and could escape local catastrophes, because the asteroid strike is presented, word-for-word, as “globally catastrophic.” Furthermore, it is fundamentally incorrect to presume that simply because an asteroid strike must occur locally, the catastrophic effects must be local. This choice does not address the large asteroid strike in question, and is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The fact that people were familiar with the fossils of dinosaurs establishes little about the time at which dinosaurs went extinct. This choice should be eliminated immediately. If you read it incorrectly, you may have believed that this choice inferred that people lived at the same time as dinosaurs. It does not; furthermore, the possibility that humans survived an asteroid strike is not good evidence that the strike did not cause the extinction of dinosaurs, since the species are very different.
Answer choice (D): The fact that large dinosaurs lived in an environment in which only small animals can live today might be taken to support the idea that dinosaurs were tough creatures that were better able than are today’s animals to handle dry environments. However, this incorrect choice merely implies that dinosaurs might be better than are today’s creatures at surviving a single presumed effect of an asteroid strike, which is definitely not good evidence that dinosaurs were overall better equipped to, or at all able to, survive all the actual effects of an asteroid strike.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If the numbers of dinosaur species are drastically decreasing both below (before) and above (after) the layer of extraterrestrial dust, that suggests that the extinctions probably occur before and after the asteroid strike, and thus that there is another important cause of the extinctions. That indicates that the asteroid-impact theory is probably not a complete explanation.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (E)
This question asks you to weaken the asteroid impact theory, so you should look to critique the idea that an asteroid impact caused the extinctions.
Answer choice (A): The fact that some dinosaurs congregated closely does not have clear relevance to whether an asteroid strike would have caused the extinction, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): You should not assume that a theory about complete global extinction would be affected by the fact that some dinosaurs migrated and could escape local catastrophes, because the asteroid strike is presented, word-for-word, as “globally catastrophic.” Furthermore, it is fundamentally incorrect to presume that simply because an asteroid strike must occur locally, the catastrophic effects must be local. This choice does not address the large asteroid strike in question, and is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): The fact that people were familiar with the fossils of dinosaurs establishes little about the time at which dinosaurs went extinct. This choice should be eliminated immediately. If you read it incorrectly, you may have believed that this choice inferred that people lived at the same time as dinosaurs. It does not; furthermore, the possibility that humans survived an asteroid strike is not good evidence that the strike did not cause the extinction of dinosaurs, since the species are very different.
Answer choice (D): The fact that large dinosaurs lived in an environment in which only small animals can live today might be taken to support the idea that dinosaurs were tough creatures that were better able than are today’s animals to handle dry environments. However, this incorrect choice merely implies that dinosaurs might be better than are today’s creatures at surviving a single presumed effect of an asteroid strike, which is definitely not good evidence that dinosaurs were overall better equipped to, or at all able to, survive all the actual effects of an asteroid strike.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If the numbers of dinosaur species are drastically decreasing both below (before) and above (after) the layer of extraterrestrial dust, that suggests that the extinctions probably occur before and after the asteroid strike, and thus that there is another important cause of the extinctions. That indicates that the asteroid-impact theory is probably not a complete explanation.