- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#34801
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (B)
You may have had some difficulty finding the researcher’s conclusion in this stimulus, because
there is no conclusion indicator. The conclusion is that “this isn’t surprising.” Taken in context, the
conclusion is that it is not surprising that mineralized dinosaur bones and dinosaur tracks in dried
mud flats—which are two of the various forms of dinosaur fossils—are rarely found together. The
support offered for this conclusion is that dinosaur-carcass scavengers probably went to the mud flats
to find food.
The researcher’s conclusion is flawed, however. Even if the scavengers went to the mud flats to find
dinosaur carcasses to feed on, that does not necessarily mean that researchers would be unable to
find mineralized dinosaur bones there. Unless, of course, the scavengers removed the carcasses from
the flats, separating the dinosaurs’ tracks from their carcasses.
This is a Strengthen question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will tell us that the
scavengers would remove the dinosaur carcasses from the mud flats, explaining why it is that
researchers do not typically find dinosaur bones and tracks there together.
Answer choice (A): The fact that dinosaur tracks are also found elsewhere does not explain why they
are not found in the flats with the dinosaur tracks.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Consistent with our prephrase, this answer
choice explains why researchers do not find dinosaur bones together with tracks in the mud flats.
Answer choice (C): The comparison between the number of tracks and the number of bones found is
irrelevant to the issue of why it is that tracks and bones are not found together in the mud flats.
Answer choice (D): Other types of dinosaur fossils are irrelevant to the conclusion, which had to do
with only two types of fossils, dinosaur tracks and mineralized bones.
Answer choice (E): Here, the answer choice provides another comparison, as in answer choice (C),
that is irrelevant to the conclusion. Without some other information to help us understand why the
difference in fossil preservation time matters, we cannot say that this answer choice has any effect on the conclusion.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (B)
You may have had some difficulty finding the researcher’s conclusion in this stimulus, because
there is no conclusion indicator. The conclusion is that “this isn’t surprising.” Taken in context, the
conclusion is that it is not surprising that mineralized dinosaur bones and dinosaur tracks in dried
mud flats—which are two of the various forms of dinosaur fossils—are rarely found together. The
support offered for this conclusion is that dinosaur-carcass scavengers probably went to the mud flats
to find food.
The researcher’s conclusion is flawed, however. Even if the scavengers went to the mud flats to find
dinosaur carcasses to feed on, that does not necessarily mean that researchers would be unable to
find mineralized dinosaur bones there. Unless, of course, the scavengers removed the carcasses from
the flats, separating the dinosaurs’ tracks from their carcasses.
This is a Strengthen question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will tell us that the
scavengers would remove the dinosaur carcasses from the mud flats, explaining why it is that
researchers do not typically find dinosaur bones and tracks there together.
Answer choice (A): The fact that dinosaur tracks are also found elsewhere does not explain why they
are not found in the flats with the dinosaur tracks.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Consistent with our prephrase, this answer
choice explains why researchers do not find dinosaur bones together with tracks in the mud flats.
Answer choice (C): The comparison between the number of tracks and the number of bones found is
irrelevant to the issue of why it is that tracks and bones are not found together in the mud flats.
Answer choice (D): Other types of dinosaur fossils are irrelevant to the conclusion, which had to do
with only two types of fossils, dinosaur tracks and mineralized bones.
Answer choice (E): Here, the answer choice provides another comparison, as in answer choice (C),
that is irrelevant to the conclusion. Without some other information to help us understand why the
difference in fossil preservation time matters, we cannot say that this answer choice has any effect on the conclusion.