Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The Indus Valley civilization (about 2600–900 B.C.) was the largest early Bronze Age urban society, with around 1,400 settlements across parts of today’s Pakistan, Afghanistan, and northwest India. Its people built well-planned brick cities on raised terraces with straight streets and early sewer systems, grew rice and cotton, and ran wide trade networks. Archaeologists find little evidence of kings, big social classes, or armies, so the society may have been partly democratic and peaceful. Scholars once blamed an invasion for its end, but new evidence shows no city battles and instead suggests droughts or big earthquakes that changed rivers ruined farming and caused people to abandon cities and spread into smaller regional communities.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: pick the statement the author would endorse by looking for causes the author treats as plausible and worth investigating. The passage says, "The causes of the civilization's decline, however, are not certain," and notes that "a massive earthquake in this seismically volatile region may have changed the course of rivers and disrupted many cities, spurring a migration of refugees to the countryside." Thus the author would likely support archaeologists searching for signs of earthquake damage.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
C
C is correct because the author presents a massive earthquake as a plausible explanation for decline and emphasizes that causes are uncertain, which implies that searching for archaeological evidence of earthquake damage would improve understanding. Support: "The causes of the civilization's decline, however, are not certain" and "a massive earthquake ... may have changed the course of rivers and disrupted many cities, spurring a migration of refugees to the countryside."
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