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- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#72635
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C).
In this question, we are being asked to strengthen the archaeologist's hypothesis. So our first task is to identify what that hypothesis is! The archaeologist begins by posing a question: How were the Parthenon's stonemasons able to carve columns that bulged outward in the center in the exact same way? The archaeologist's hypothesis is what she thinks the answer to this question might be--she believes they were able to construct the columns in this precise way because they used scale drawings. So our prephrase is that we're looking for anything that would support the idea that the Parthenon's stonemasons used scale drawings to create the columns.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice has nothing to do with using scale drawings so it does not support the archaeologist's hypothesis. Whether or not modern attempts to recreate columns like those at the Parthenon have been successful has nothing to do with how the Parthenon's stonemasons originally created those columns.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is also irrelevant to the hypothesis about the scale drawings. Knowing that Didyma was constructed over a century after the Parthenon still doesn't tell us anything about how the Parthenon was constructed or if the stone masons at the two temples used similar techniques.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This is the only answer choice that addresses the archaeologist's hypothesis about the stonemasons using scale drawings to construct the Parthenon's columns by telling us that using scale drawings was actually a fairly common construction practice in ancient Greece. If ancient Greeks commonly used scale drawings in construction, then that strengthens the idea that the Parthenon's stonemasons used scale drawings when constructing the Parthenon.
Answer choice (D): Again, this answer choice tells us nothing about how the columns were constructed and, specifically, whether scale drawings were used. The height difference of the columns does not tell us if they were constructed in similar or different ways.
Answer choice (E): Yet another answer choice that tells us nothing about whether scale drawings were used to construct the columns at the Parthenon. The amount of experience the stonemasons had does nothing to support the hypothesis that they used scale drawings.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C).
In this question, we are being asked to strengthen the archaeologist's hypothesis. So our first task is to identify what that hypothesis is! The archaeologist begins by posing a question: How were the Parthenon's stonemasons able to carve columns that bulged outward in the center in the exact same way? The archaeologist's hypothesis is what she thinks the answer to this question might be--she believes they were able to construct the columns in this precise way because they used scale drawings. So our prephrase is that we're looking for anything that would support the idea that the Parthenon's stonemasons used scale drawings to create the columns.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice has nothing to do with using scale drawings so it does not support the archaeologist's hypothesis. Whether or not modern attempts to recreate columns like those at the Parthenon have been successful has nothing to do with how the Parthenon's stonemasons originally created those columns.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is also irrelevant to the hypothesis about the scale drawings. Knowing that Didyma was constructed over a century after the Parthenon still doesn't tell us anything about how the Parthenon was constructed or if the stone masons at the two temples used similar techniques.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This is the only answer choice that addresses the archaeologist's hypothesis about the stonemasons using scale drawings to construct the Parthenon's columns by telling us that using scale drawings was actually a fairly common construction practice in ancient Greece. If ancient Greeks commonly used scale drawings in construction, then that strengthens the idea that the Parthenon's stonemasons used scale drawings when constructing the Parthenon.
Answer choice (D): Again, this answer choice tells us nothing about how the columns were constructed and, specifically, whether scale drawings were used. The height difference of the columns does not tell us if they were constructed in similar or different ways.
Answer choice (E): Yet another answer choice that tells us nothing about whether scale drawings were used to construct the columns at the Parthenon. The amount of experience the stonemasons had does nothing to support the hypothesis that they used scale drawings.