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SAT Reading: Classifying the Relationship Between Two Passages
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How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...

Relating Information in a Table to the Rising Price of Tulips
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SAT Reading: Recognizing Explicit Information in a Scientific Passage
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Does the moon create lava tides? We can actually measure the moon's effects on volcanoes. How insanely cool is that? If we can do all this, then wh...

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SAT Reading 6.7 Passage Comparison 172 Views


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Description:

SAT Reading: Passage Comparison Drill 6, Problem 7

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by radiocarbon dating. What lonely archaeologists

00:08

do on a Friday night.

00:26

All of the following questions could be answered explicitly on the basis of the information

00:31

given in these two passages EXCEPT...what?

00:41

Here's the secret to acing this question: go through each of the choices and ask,

00:45

"Can I answer this without guessing or -- God forbid -- resorting to Wikipedia?"

00:51

If the answer is no, then we're good to go. Let's get started...

00:54

(A). Yeah -- for whatever reason, the author tells us the time of the museum's opening

00:59

ceremony in lines 5-8.

01:01

Choice (A) is wrong.

01:03

Lines 66-67 tell us all about radiocarbon dating.

01:07

Choice (B) is a no-go.

01:08

Lines 54-56 will tell you exactly were these landmarks were first established, so (E) is off.

01:16

All you have to do to know that choice (C) is wrong is to take a glance at lines 28-30.

01:21

The museum does, in fact, discuss the effects of disease on American Indians, making (C)

01:26

wrong as well. If somebody asked us this question about Dena

01:30

Dincauze's <<din-causes>> contributions to the museum we'd get it totally wrong,

01:34

because neither passage talks about it.

01:36

Which makes choice (D) the right answer.

01:39

Sometimes wrong feels so right...

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