Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Before Europeans arrived, the Haudenosaune (Iroquois) used wampum—white and purple shell beads—not mainly as money but as spiritual and political messages. Single beads stood for basic spiritual ideas (white for a helpful spirit, purple for a disruptive one) and were later strung to send simple requests like truces. After the tribes formed a confederacy, they created wampum belts with pictures and color patterns that recorded laws, named nations and meetings, and helped keep peace between groups for many years.
Logic Breakdown
Look for the author's hedging language about the meanings of wampum-belt symbols (words like "possibly," "seem," "usually") in the third paragraph and match each choice to what the passage actually states about European use, chronology, and interpretive certainty.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the author explicitly signals uncertainty about the modern interpretation of belt symbols. For example: "Council fires, possibly indicating talks in progress, were diamond outlines that could appear alone or within trees or longhouses." Also: "Lines between humanlike figures seem to have indicated the current state of relations between peoples; belts containing such images were often used as safe-conduct passes." And: "longhouses, depicted in front-view outline, usually meant a particular nation of the confederacy." These hedging terms ("possibly," "seem," "usually") show that present-day interpretations of some symbols are not conclusive.
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