- Sat Sep 17, 2022 7:08 pm
#97298
My favorite way to think about this question is to compare it to finding a fly in your soup. Let me explain:
The author thinks that finding biomarkers in petroleum means that petroleum is made from living stuff rather than from deep carbon.
To weaken that, we need to say that the biomarkers are not indicative of what the petroleum is made of. It's extra. To me, that's like finding a fly in my soup - it doesn't prove that my soup is made of bugs! My soup could still be just vegetables and broth, and a fly happened to get in it somehow. Likewise, the biomarkers could just be some stuff that happened to be in the carbon that formed the petroleum, and not be the main thing that the petroleum is made of.
Goingslow - I don't see the biomarkers as evidence that deep carbon is the source. I think your first suggestion is the correct one.
supjeremyklein - good analysis, well done, and thanks for the assist!
The author thinks that finding biomarkers in petroleum means that petroleum is made from living stuff rather than from deep carbon.
To weaken that, we need to say that the biomarkers are not indicative of what the petroleum is made of. It's extra. To me, that's like finding a fly in my soup - it doesn't prove that my soup is made of bugs! My soup could still be just vegetables and broth, and a fly happened to get in it somehow. Likewise, the biomarkers could just be some stuff that happened to be in the carbon that formed the petroleum, and not be the main thing that the petroleum is made of.
Goingslow - I don't see the biomarkers as evidence that deep carbon is the source. I think your first suggestion is the correct one.
supjeremyklein - good analysis, well done, and thanks for the assist!
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