- Fri Apr 13, 2018 5:23 pm
#44966
Hi elewis,
The stimulus isn't necessarily saying that organic matter can only grow on trimmed surfaces, but rather that you can test the age of the organic material that is trapped under the varnish coating of trimmed surfaces in order to determine how old a monument is. Answer Choice B points out that this method isn't reliable in places where people reuse old stones to make new monuments. That is, you can't determine the age of the monument by looking at the age of the trapped varnish if there is a possibility that the monument used older stones. The organic material that is tested could have been trapped on the stone from the first time the stone was cut, thousands of years earlier.
Look at it this way: The author says that the monument being built thousands of years ago is what causes the effect of the organic matter therein being thousands of years old. But there is an alternate cause for finding organic material so old; namely, the stones used are old, but the monument itself isn't.
I hope that clears things up!
The stimulus isn't necessarily saying that organic matter can only grow on trimmed surfaces, but rather that you can test the age of the organic material that is trapped under the varnish coating of trimmed surfaces in order to determine how old a monument is. Answer Choice B points out that this method isn't reliable in places where people reuse old stones to make new monuments. That is, you can't determine the age of the monument by looking at the age of the trapped varnish if there is a possibility that the monument used older stones. The organic material that is tested could have been trapped on the stone from the first time the stone was cut, thousands of years earlier.
Look at it this way: The author says that the monument being built thousands of years ago is what causes the effect of the organic matter therein being thousands of years old. But there is an alternate cause for finding organic material so old; namely, the stones used are old, but the monument itself isn't.
I hope that clears things up!