- Thu May 10, 2018 4:12 pm
#45580
mary_jando,
Thanks for your question, and sure thing! This is a "resolve the paradox" question that reads:
"A 1955 analysis of paint samples from an Italian painting found evidence of cobalt, suggesting the use of cobalt blue, a pigment not used in Europe before 1804. The painting was thus deemed to have been produced sometime after 1804. A 2009 analysis also found cobalt, but that analysis suggested that the painting might have been produced before 1804."
We should be able to have a really strong prephrase for what the paradox we are being asked to solve is. Essentially, we are trying to figure out how the 2009 analysis could have found cobalt/cobalt blue (indicating a post-1804 production) yet the analysis still suggests that the painting could have been produced pre-1804.
Remember that in a "resolve the paradox" question, we should be asking ourselves: "If this answer choice were true, would it resolve the discrepancy between the paradoxical items in the stimulus?" If the answer is yes, then that is our credited answer choice.
With that in mind, we can move to our answer choices:
(A) The 2009 analysis revealed that cobalt was located only in the topmost paint layer, which was possibly applied to conceal damage to original paint layers. - This is our credited answer choice. If this were true, it would mean that the item could have produced pre-1804, and then had cobalt added post-1804 to the top layer, thereby resolving our paradox.
(B) The 2009 analysis used sophisticated scientific equipment that can detect much smaller amounts of cobalt than could the equipment used for the 1955 analysis. - Even if this were true, the issue is that the 2009 analysis detected cobalt yet still placed the production as pre-1804. This answer choice doesn't help us resolve how that could happen, and so cannot be correct.
(C) The 2009 analysis took more samples from the painting than the 1955 analysis did, though those samples were smaller. - While more samples may seem to make the dating more accurate (and perhaps they would), this answer doesn't address the cobalt issue, and so cannot be our credited answer.
(D) Many experts, based on the style and the subject matter of the painting, have dated the painting to the 1700s. - This does not address our paradox involving cobalt, and so cannot be our correct answer choice.
(E) New information that came to light in the 1990s suggested that cobalt blue was used only rarely in Italy in the years immediately following 1804. - This answer choice still doesn't explain how there could be pre-1804 cobalt blue, and so doesn't help to resolve the paradox.
Hope that helps!
Alex