- Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:54 pm
#90606
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (D).
In this stimulus, we are told that there is evidence that a certain ancient society burned large areas of land. Some suggest that this is an indication of large-scale agriculture: the society burned the land to clear ground for planting. But, we are told, there is little evidence of cultivation after the fires. So, the author concludes, it is likely that this society was still a hunter-gatherer society.
Because this is a Strengthen question, we should first identify the conclusion, which is the last sentence of the stimulus. To strengthen this conclusion, it would be beneficial to find an answer choice that explains why a hunter-gatherer society would want to clear large areas of land for reasons that were non-agricultural, as this is left unexplained by the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): Interesting, I guess, but we're only concerned with one ancient society in this stimulus, and we are trying to support the idea that they were hunter-gatherer. Whether some agricultural societies had agriculture before they began using fire to clear land is irrelevant to us.
Answer choice (B): Makes sense, but why clear of large tracts of land, then? Can't they just use a campfire? This answer choice tries to present reasonable uses for fire by hunter-gatherer societies, but clearing large tracts of land would not be necessary for these goals, so this does not strengthen the argument.
Answer choice (C): The problem here is "inedible." Sure, a large fire would release the seeds, but we don't know if these seeds become edible once subjected to heat, and we also aren't told why the members of the society can't just gather the seeds and then roast them on an open fire. We need an explanation that makes the use of a large-scale fire reasonable, and this isn't it.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Bingo! This answer choice gives us exactly what we're looking for. Hunter-gatherers hunted animals, and this presents a reasonable explanation for why they would use fire to clear lands that's non-agricultural: it allowed them to move animal populations as a group to a different area efficiently.
Answer choice (E): Again, similar to (A), another interesting fact, but just because few were aware doesn't mean they didn't do it. Ultimately, this does nothing to strengthen our argument about a specific hunter-gatherer society.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (D).
In this stimulus, we are told that there is evidence that a certain ancient society burned large areas of land. Some suggest that this is an indication of large-scale agriculture: the society burned the land to clear ground for planting. But, we are told, there is little evidence of cultivation after the fires. So, the author concludes, it is likely that this society was still a hunter-gatherer society.
Because this is a Strengthen question, we should first identify the conclusion, which is the last sentence of the stimulus. To strengthen this conclusion, it would be beneficial to find an answer choice that explains why a hunter-gatherer society would want to clear large areas of land for reasons that were non-agricultural, as this is left unexplained by the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): Interesting, I guess, but we're only concerned with one ancient society in this stimulus, and we are trying to support the idea that they were hunter-gatherer. Whether some agricultural societies had agriculture before they began using fire to clear land is irrelevant to us.
Answer choice (B): Makes sense, but why clear of large tracts of land, then? Can't they just use a campfire? This answer choice tries to present reasonable uses for fire by hunter-gatherer societies, but clearing large tracts of land would not be necessary for these goals, so this does not strengthen the argument.
Answer choice (C): The problem here is "inedible." Sure, a large fire would release the seeds, but we don't know if these seeds become edible once subjected to heat, and we also aren't told why the members of the society can't just gather the seeds and then roast them on an open fire. We need an explanation that makes the use of a large-scale fire reasonable, and this isn't it.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Bingo! This answer choice gives us exactly what we're looking for. Hunter-gatherers hunted animals, and this presents a reasonable explanation for why they would use fire to clear lands that's non-agricultural: it allowed them to move animal populations as a group to a different area efficiently.
Answer choice (E): Again, similar to (A), another interesting fact, but just because few were aware doesn't mean they didn't do it. Ultimately, this does nothing to strengthen our argument about a specific hunter-gatherer society.