Library/PT 114/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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 pieces of evidence the author cites for routine burning (look for mentions of charcoal deposits, meadows/glades, mosaic forests of different stages, and herbaceous undergrowth). The correct EXCEPT choice will be the one not supported — here the passage actually says fire characteristics varied regionally, so a claim of similarity is not cited.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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6.

As evidence for the routine practice of forest burning by native populations before the arrival of Europeans, the author cites all of the following EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
A
A is the correct EXCEPT because the passage does not cite 'the similar characteristics of fires in different regions' as evidence; it says the opposite: 'the characteristics and impact of fires set by native populations varied regionally according to population size, extent of resource management techniques, and environment.' The passage does cite the other items as evidence: 'sedimentary charcoal accumulations ... are greatest where known native American settlements were greatest' (supports D); 'Controlled burning created grassy openings such as meadows and glades' (supports E); 'Burning also promoted a mosaic quality to North and South American ecosystems, creating forests in many different stages of ecological development' (supports B); and 'Much of the mature forestland was characterized by open, herbaceous undergrowth, another result of the clearing brought about by burning' (supports C).
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