Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Archaeologist Sandra Olsen excavated a 6,000‑year‑old Botai village in Kazakhstan and found lots of bones in the houses—about 90% were horses. Because horse bones don’t look different when horses are tamed, she studied the ages and sexes of the dead animals: herders usually kill young males but keep females, while hunters would mainly take family groups, which would lower the number of adult male bones. The Botai remains include many adult males (and even whole horse skeletons and horse burials near human graves), so Olsen argues the people likely kept and used horses—possibly riding them—rather than only hunting them for meat.
Logic Breakdown
Recognize that the sentence about herders introduces a general culling pattern for domesticated animals that the author then contrasts with Botai mortality data; determine whether the reference functions as a comparison to draw conclusions about Botai horse use.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.The reference by the author of the passage to the practices of herders of domesticated animals (first sentence of the second paragraph) serves primarily as
Correct Answer
A
The author presents a general pattern for domesticated herds and immediately compares it to the Botai data. Quote: "Herders of domesticated animals used for meat or milk typically kill off all but a few males before they are fully mature, but not the females, and archaeologists have evidence of a similar pattern for prehistoric goat herding." He then notes the Botai find: "At the Botai sites, however, Olsen has found that most of the male horses were fully grown and slightly outnumber the females." Because the herders' practice is used as a baseline against which the Botai mortality pattern is evaluated, the reference serves primarily as a point of comparison for reaching conclusions about the use of horses by the Botai.
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