- Sat Apr 09, 2016 9:29 am
#22885
Complete Question Explanation
StrengthenX. The correct answer choice is (D)
The centipede fossils are much older than the fossils which were, until now, thought to be the oldest land-dwelling animals. Also, nearby fossils were from water-dwelling animals. So how can the paleontologists say that these centipedes were land-dwelling?
Read the question stem carefully. Four of these answer choices will support the paleontologists' position. One answer choice, the correct answer choice, will not.
Answer choice (A): The well-adapted legs are good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (B): That all other previously known centipedes are land dwellers is good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (C): Perhaps the fossilized centipedes lived on mud flats, which are basically land, but occasionally water-dwelling animals were washed in with river water. Thus, this evidence is consistent with these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The paleontologists may want to argue, "Ignore those water-dwelling fossils. That's just a fluke, and we can explain it away." But all the previous fossils from land-dwelling animals were not found near fossils of water-dwelling animals. That fact makes the current case very suspicious.
Answer choice (E): The nearby spider fossils, which showed that the spiders could breathe only air and not water, is good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.
StrengthenX. The correct answer choice is (D)
The centipede fossils are much older than the fossils which were, until now, thought to be the oldest land-dwelling animals. Also, nearby fossils were from water-dwelling animals. So how can the paleontologists say that these centipedes were land-dwelling?
Read the question stem carefully. Four of these answer choices will support the paleontologists' position. One answer choice, the correct answer choice, will not.
Answer choice (A): The well-adapted legs are good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (B): That all other previously known centipedes are land dwellers is good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (C): Perhaps the fossilized centipedes lived on mud flats, which are basically land, but occasionally water-dwelling animals were washed in with river water. Thus, this evidence is consistent with these centipedes being land-dwelling.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The paleontologists may want to argue, "Ignore those water-dwelling fossils. That's just a fluke, and we can explain it away." But all the previous fossils from land-dwelling animals were not found near fossils of water-dwelling animals. That fact makes the current case very suspicious.
Answer choice (E): The nearby spider fossils, which showed that the spiders could breathe only air and not water, is good evidence for these centipedes being land-dwelling.