- Sat Mar 17, 2018 8:35 pm
#44417
I took the inclusion of “several years” in Answer Choice D as enough reason to eliminate it. Farmers were “worldwide sharply increasing” fertilizer use from 1951-85… that’s almost 35 years of an increase, definitely more than “several years.” If this had been true, we would have seen a decline in use MUCH earlier than 1985. Furthermore, we don’t really even know when the decline started. Any additional help here??
Also, with E — yes, it’s temporary, but disputes could (& typically do) have lasting effects, so I see that as a GREAT explanation to the discrepancy. Again, we don’t know that the decline in fertilizer use “only began in 1985” — that’s just the arbitrary date that the author used to present the rate in decline.. it could have been, for example, 1983 or 1976 etc…
Also, with E — yes, it’s temporary, but disputes could (& typically do) have lasting effects, so I see that as a GREAT explanation to the discrepancy. Again, we don’t know that the decline in fertilizer use “only began in 1985” — that’s just the arbitrary date that the author used to present the rate in decline.. it could have been, for example, 1983 or 1976 etc…