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
Note language that indicates how the author characterizes Lowe's method (whether it's standard/common) and any evaluative statements about its reliability; match an answer that combines "widely used" with "questionable."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.It can be inferred from the passage that the author would describe the method Lowe used to construct a step-by-step chronology of the actual collapse of Classic Mayan civilization as
Correct Answer
B
"Like previous investigators, Lowe relies on dated monuments to construct a step-by-step account of the actual collapse." shows the method is standard or generally accepted. The author then criticizes its dependability: "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." The passage also summarizes Lowe's specific assumption: "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." Together these statements support describing the method as generally accepted but questionable.
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