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
Ask whether the passage opens with a claim/hypothesis and then supplies supporting evidence or whether it only lists observations and then draws a conclusion; find the opening sentence that states Olsen's claim and see how the following paragraphs function.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Which one of the following most accurately describes the organization of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
Correct. The passage begins by proposing Olsen's hypothesis that she 'has assembled what may be evidence of the earliest known people to have domesticated and ridden horses,' and the subsequent paragraphs develop multiple lines of reasoning in support of that hypothesis (for example: 'So Olsen relies heavily on statistical tabulations of the Botai horses by sex and age at death...'; 'Olsen reasons that if the Botai had indeed begun riding, they would likely have kept males alive to ride'; and 'Another clue... their remains include full skeletons... Olsen reasons that these were probably domesticated horses'). The organization is therefore a hypothesis outlined and then a line of reasoning developed to support it.
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