Library/PT 157/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Passage A reports that a company that thinks it found the sunken British ship HMS Sussex made a new legal deal with the UK to raise the ship and share the money; the company will fund the deep-sea recovery using modern technology and may sell gold coins to pay for the project while saying it will protect important artifacts. Passage B is a UNESCO draft that says things underwater for 100+ years should usually be left in place, not sold, and that any work must add to knowledge or protection, use non‑destructive methods, avoid disturbing human remains, be carefully recorded, and encourage low-impact public access. In short, A describes a for-profit salvage partnership that allows selling coins, while B argues against commercial exploitation and for preserving sites.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Choose the option that links commercial sale of recovered artifacts to harms to preservation and scholarship. Passage B states that "The commercial exploitation of UCH for trade, sale, barter, or speculation...is fundamentally incompatible with the protection and proper management of the UCH," and Passage A reports that "Many archaeologists abhor the sale of recovered artifacts, arguing that this inhibits scholarly analysis and public display." Look for an answer that shows sale leads to the sort of harm the passages reject (e.g., looting or removal from scholarly/public access).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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15.

Which one of the following would, if true, strengthen the position of the draft convention in passage B, as well as that of the critics of for-profit archaeology in passage A?

Correct Answer
B
B strengthens both passages because it connects commercial sale to the specific harms each passage condemns. Passage B condemns commercial exploitation as "fundamentally incompatible with the protection and proper management of the UCH;" if selling artifacts "encourages the looting of archaeological sites by nonscientists," then commercial markets directly undermine protection and management. Passage A records that "Many archaeologists abhor the sale of recovered artifacts, arguing that this inhibits scholarly analysis and public display;" looting by nonscientists would remove objects from proper scientific recording and public institutions, exactly the critics' concern. Thus B directly supports the convention's prohibition and the archaeologists' objection.
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