Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People often assume Mesolithic people used forest clearings mainly for hunting or food, but the archaeological evidence is weak. Some ethnographic examples support the food idea, but others point to nonfood reasons. One alternative is that fear of the dense woods led people to make and stick to paths; where paths crossed, wider open spots appeared and became handy places to rest or meet. So some clearings may have formed for safety or social reasons rather than for obtaining food.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the author's main claim: he questions the dominant economic (resource-procurement) view of Mesolithic clearings and develops an alternative noneconomic hypothesis (fear-driven paths and social clearings). Choose the answer that states both the widely accepted model and the passage's claim that an alternative is comparably supported.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.Which one of the following most accurately states the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
B
The passage (1) notes the standard view: "the common view is that clearings had an economic use," and that archaeological support for this is weak: "The archaeological evidence for this, however, is at best circumstantial." (2) It then explains that most support comes from ethnography but that "other ethnographic evidence may suggest a different vision, a noneconomic one," and (3) the author develops an alternative hypothesis based on fear and paths: "I propose that one of the primary motivators in establishing paths may have been fear of the wooded surroundings" and that this could mean "some clearings [are] purely social phenomena." Together these lines show the author acknowledges the widely accepted resource-procurement model while arguing that comparable evidence supports a noneconomic alternative—exactly what choice B states.
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