Library/PT 154/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Great Zimbabwe was a large walled city in southern Africa (900s–1500s). Although many say its wealth came from controlling gold, the passage shows that a cattle-based economy was the real foundation: moving herds seasonally across distant pastures required strong, centralized control, so rulers owned the cattle and gave them to people as favors. Those cattle ties reached into marriage and daily life, gave rulers power over the population, and let them recruit laborers for dangerous, large-scale gold mining—so the cattle system made both the big city and the gold industry possible.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the functional role of the cattle economy in the passage (it enabled a large, settled population and centralized coordination where crop cultivation could not) and pick the choice that shows the same enabling relationship.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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3.

Based on the passage, the relationship of Great Zimbabwe's cattle economy to the size of Great Zimbabwe's population is most analogous to the relationship between

Correct Answer
B
B is correct. The passage shows that the cattle economy made a large, settled population possible in an environment unsuited to sustained crop cultivation: "During the fourteenth century, the population of Great Zimbabwe probably exceeded 10,000." The passage explains why crops could not support such a population: "the only system of crop cultivation these soils could support was one that involved long fallow periods between plantings, a pattern typically resulting in low population densities and considerable mobility." It then identifies the cattle system as the enabling alternative: "The alternative agricultural system that Great Zimbabwe practiced was a complex cattle economy that exploited enormous areas of land for grazing. The population of Great Zimbabwe relied heavily on beef for food." Because the cattle economy provided the necessary resource base and social coordination that allowed a large city to exist where crops could not, it is analogous to irrigation enabling a farm in a desert (irrigation supplies what the environment lacks so farming can occur).
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