Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages say that sticky, starchy foods from farming tend to cause more tooth decay, so scientists can use ancient teeth to see when people started farming. Studies usually find more cavities in farming groups, though some hunter‑gatherers who ate processed starchy foods also had lots of cavities. At Ban Chiang, people did farm more over time but the earlier group had slightly more cavities; researchers think this is because the later diet stayed varied and shifted from sweeter yams (more cavity‑causing) to rice (less cavity‑causing), and changes in tooth wear don’t explain the result.
Logic Breakdown
Compare both passages' claims about the link between agriculture and caries; find a statement both authors accept—specifically that the relationship is not strictly or directly deterministic.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.It is most likely that both authors would agree with which one of the following statements about dental caries?
Correct Answer
D
Both authors acknowledge a general link between agricultural diets and higher caries rates but also emphasize exceptions or complicating factors, so caries frequency does not necessarily map directly onto agricultural dependence. Passage A says, "in general, the greater a population's dependence on agriculture is, the higher its rate of caries formation will be," but immediately allows exceptions: "Under some circumstances, however, nonagricultural populations may exhibit relatively high caries rates." Passage B reports an unexpected pattern—"overall caries frequency is slightly greater in the Early Group"—and concludes that "although dependence on agriculture increased, the diet in the Late period remained varied enough that no single food dominated." These statements together support choice D.
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