Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People often imagine the Americas in 1492 as untouched wilderness, but researchers show that Native peoples regularly used fire to shape forests long before Europeans arrived. Evidence like charcoal in sediments near big settlements and distinct plant patterns shows that controlled burning made grassy openings, kept landscapes a patchwork of different forest stages, and favored sun-loving foods (berries, some pines). In places such as the southeastern U.S. and parts of Nicaragua, regular burning created and maintained pine-dominated forests, and when people left those areas the land later reverted to mixed hardwoods.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for explicit examples where the author links a specific forest type to controlled (regular) burning—choose the forest the passage says occurs today as the result of clearing followed by regular burning.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.Which one of the following is a type of forest identified by the author as a product of controlled burning in recent times?
Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly links Nicaraguan pine forests to clearing plus regular burning: 'Burning also influenced forest composition in the tropics, where natural fires are rare. An example is the pine-dominant forests of Nicaragua... Today, the Nicaraguan pines occur where there has been clearing followed by regular burning, and the same is likely to have occurred in the past.' These sentences identify the pine forests of Nicaragua (low tropical elevations) as present today because of clearing followed by regular (controlled) burning, so choice E is correct.
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