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

Locate Passage A's statements about the joint agreement (especially its explicit allowance to sell coins to fund the project and its distinction between coins and cultural artifacts) and compare that position to Passage B's prohibitions; choose the option that matches the company's likely defense of selling duplicate coins while preserving representative examples.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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18.

Which one of the following statements is the most appropriate response by a representative of the company mentioned in passage A to the draft convention delineated in passage B?

Correct Answer
C
Passage A explicitly states that the agreement distinguishes among artifact types and allows sale of coins to fund the effort: "The agreement . . . draws a distinction between different classes of artifacts, recognizing that cultural items have greater archaeological value than coins, which it allows to be sold to help pay for the project." Passage A also notes the coins' market potential: "The US$4 billion figure is the coins' theoretical value if sold to collectors." Those sentences support a company representative arguing that keeping representative samples for museums while selling virtually identical coins to pay for the project is justifiable. (Passage B’s competing position is clear: "The commercial exploitation of UCH for trade, sale, barter, or speculation...is fundamentally incompatible with the protection and proper management of the UCH.") Choice C most directly matches the company's explicit stance in Passage A.
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