- Tue Jun 02, 2020 1:08 pm
#75884
Hi callmeclaire!
To understand why (D) is incorrect, start by considering the question stem, "The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about the results of the groundwater-locating study discussed in the final paragraph?" This tells us (1) that the question is asking about the author's perspective, (2) it is a must be true question, and (3) it revolves around a reference to the last paragraph of the passage.
Since the question is asking about the final paragraph, it is worth noting its function. The prior paragraph ("Proponents of dowsing point out ...") provides some of the arguments presented by those who believe that dowsing works. In support of this claim, such proponents of dowsing emphasize that successful dowsers have higher success rates than geologists and hydrologists in locating water. This illuminates the function of the final paragraph, which describes a "recent and extensive study" (line 48) that corroborates this claim.
In other words, this study compared the methods of dowsers (who use sticks, pendulums, or rods (line 3) to detect water) with the methods used by geologists and hydrologists (who use "scientific tools such as electromagnetic sensors or seismic readings to locate groundwater" (lines 45-46)). This study corroborated what proponents of dowsing claimed--that successful dowsers have higher success rates than geologists and hydrologists in locating water.
Answer choice (D) states, "The results demonstrate that dowsers are most successful in their efforts to locate groundwater when they use tools that are typically employed by geologists and hydrologists." The final paragraph doesn't say anything about dowsers using the tools of geologists and hydrologists. To the contrary, the results are specifically of a study comparing the tools/methods of dowsers with those utilized by geologists and hydrologists, so those results don't provide us with information about how successful dowsers might be if they used the tools/methods of geologists and hydrologists.