- Tue Aug 01, 2017 2:47 pm
#37865
There's no need to assume there is a rollover, because the definition of the tally is provided for you: the total amount mined but not consumed. Pretend for a moment that 1980 was the first year any coal was mined, and they mined 10 tons that year. Imagine they consumed 8 tons that year. At the end of the year, the total amount "mined but not consumed" (read that phrase as a whole) is 2 tons. Now, in 1981 they mine another 10 tons. What is the total amount mined at that point? 20 tons. They consume 8 tons again, so now at the end of 1981 the total amount "mined but not consumed" is 4 tons. There's no assumption required - it's just reading the definition as it is, in plain English. Maybe you are reading into it something else, like "in that year"? Don't add to, subtract from, or otherwise alter that definition.
Now we get to some year (1991, let's say) where the tally (the total amount mined but not consumed) is lower than it was a year before. No matter what the numbers are for the amounts mined, consumed, or what exactly the tally was a year ago or is now, the only way that the total amount mined but not consumed would go down is if you consumed some of that prior year's tally. In other words, in 1991 you must have consumed more than you mined. If you mined a ton and consumed less than a ton, your tally would have gone up. If you consumed exactly that one ton, your tally would have stayed the same. Only by consuming more than that ton could your tally have gotten smaller.
By the way, "mined but not consumed" means the same thing as "mined and not consumed", and those both mean the leftover or surplus, the unused excess.
I hope that helps clear things up some for you.
Now we get to some year (1991, let's say) where the tally (the total amount mined but not consumed) is lower than it was a year before. No matter what the numbers are for the amounts mined, consumed, or what exactly the tally was a year ago or is now, the only way that the total amount mined but not consumed would go down is if you consumed some of that prior year's tally. In other words, in 1991 you must have consumed more than you mined. If you mined a ton and consumed less than a ton, your tally would have gone up. If you consumed exactly that one ton, your tally would have stayed the same. Only by consuming more than that ton could your tally have gotten smaller.
By the way, "mined but not consumed" means the same thing as "mined and not consumed", and those both mean the leftover or surplus, the unused excess.
I hope that helps clear things up some for you.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam