- Sat Feb 03, 2024 12:42 pm
#105179
My thought about answer C was just this, Jimmy: we have no information at all about ice masses advancing. None. We can tell that the ice masses had not yet yielded to spruce forests when the warmth-adapted ground beetles replaced cold-adapted ones, but were the ice masses advancing, receding, or standing still?
Digging a little deeper into that answer, we find another problem: the whole point of the investigation was to determine when the ice age ended. The facts never established that date. Was it when the beetles changed, or when the forests took over? We don't know! So how can we infer that the ice masses were even still around when the ice age ended, let alone whether they were advancing? That would require us to decide that the earlier date was the correct one, AND to assume that the ice masses were advancing during the next few hundred years before the spruce forests took over. That answer needs way too much help for it to be a valid inference; the correct answer should need no help at all, because the facts in the stimulus would support it all by themselves.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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