Library/PT 104/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

John Lowe studies the Classic Maya collapse by looking at dated carved monuments to see when places were occupied. He traces more monument-building from A.D. 672–751 without geographic growth, then alliance breakdowns (751–790), deaths exceeding births (790–830), and a stop in construction after about 830 that led to collapse within a century. Lowe explains this as population growth forcing harder farming that harmed the soil, while a growing elite pulled labor away for monuments and luxuries, which led to war and refugee movements that caused states to fail in a chain reaction. But his story depends on assuming that when people stopped carving monuments a site was abandoned, so if people kept living there after carving ended his timeline and cause could be wrong.

Logic Breakdown

Scan the passage for its main structural moves: identify what each paragraph does (method/basis, explanatory theory, critique) and pick the answer that matches that sequence.

Passage Stimulus

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22.

Which one of the following best describes the organization of the passage?

Correct Answer
D
The passage: (1) describes the basis/method of Lowe's study (para. 1: "Lowe bases his study on a detailed examination of the known archaeological record... Using the erection of new monuments as a means to determine a site's occupation span, Lowe assumes that once new monuments ceased to be built, a site had been abandoned."), (2) presents Lowe's explanatory theory (para. 2: "Having established this chronology, Lowe sets forth a plausible explanation... He theorizes that Classic Mayan civilization was brought down by the interaction of several factors..."), and (3) points out a possible central flaw in the study (para. 3: "If there is a central flaw in Lowe's explanation, it is that the entire edifice rests on the assumption that the available evidence paints a true picture of how the collapse proceeded."). Choice D accurately describes this organization: the basis of the study, the theory explaining the evidence, and a possible flaw.
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