Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT147 S2 P3 Q16 Explanation

Mesolithic Woodland Clearings

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Passage

It is generally accepted that woodland clearings were utilized by Mesolithic human populations (populations in Europe roughly 7,000 to 12,000 years ago) for food procurement. Whether there was deliberate removal of tree cover to attract grazing animals or whether naturally created clearings just afforded opportunistic hunting, the common view is that clearings preparation of animals for human consumption took place within or near such clearings is generally lacking.

Most of the evidence invoked in favor of the resource-procurement model for clearings comes from ethnography rather than archaeology, and principally from the recognition that some recent premodern populations used fire to increase grazing areas. But while some ethnographic evidence has been used to bolster the resource-procurement model, other ethnographic of why clearings may have been deliberately created and/or used.

Geographer Yi-Fu Tuan argues that right up through the modern era, human behavior has been driven by fear of the wilderness. While we might be tempted to see this kind of anxiety as a product of modern urban life, it is clear that such fears are also manifest in preliterate and nonurban view of the purpose and use of woodland clearings may change.

We have recently become aware of the importance of woodland paths in prehistory. The fact that Mesolithic human populations moved around the landscape is not a new idea. However, the fact that they may have done so along prescribed pathways has only recently come to the fore. I propose that one of fear of harm from wildlife or spirits, or of simply getting lost.

From this view an alternative hypothesis may be developed. First, paths become established and acquire a measure of long-term permanence. Then this permanence leads to concentration of activity in some areas (near the paths) rather than others (away from the paths). This allows us to legitimately consider wilderness as a motivating concept meet, wider clearings emerge as corners are cut and intersections become convenient spots for resting.

What this question is testing

Locate Detail

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
16.

According to the resource-procurement model for clearings, Mesolithic human populations engaged in which one of

Answer choices

  1. Wrong Point of View4% picked this

    They traveled on preestablished

    The author's explanation for these curious woodland clearings is that they were where some pre-established pathways would meet. So our author thinks these Mesolithic humans traveled on some pathways. But the question stem wants the view of the resource-procurement model. Their view is in the first two sentences of the passage, They didn't talk about pathways. They just said that humans used these clearings for hunting animals.

  2. Correct80% picked this

    They hunted animals that grazed in

    Why this is right

    The view of the resource-procurement model is expressed in the first two sentences of the passage. This model interprets the woodland clearings as areas where Mesolithic humans procured food, by opportunistically hunting the grazing animals that were attracted to these clearings.

    Skill tested: Locate Detail · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  3. Out of Scope: domesticated animals10% picked this

    They grazed domesticated animals in

    The second sentence is talking about grazing animals who were attracted to these woodland clearings. That implies that they are wild animals roaming where they want. Domesticated animals go where the humans tell them to go, not where they're attracted. And the second sentence is talking about opportunistically hunting these animals. Shepherds don't take their domesticated flock to graze somewhere and then opportunistically hunt them.

  4. Wrong Point of View3% picked this

    They used clearings as resting

    The author's explanation for these curious woodland clearings is that they were where some pathways met and humans would pause and chill for a bit. So our author thinks these Mesolithic humans used these clearings as resting sites. But the question stem wants the view of the resource-procurement model. Their view is in the first two sentences of the passage, They didn't talk about resting.

  5. Out of Scope: crops2% picked this

    They planted crops in

    There is nothing in our Support Window (the first two sentences) about "crops". The fact that animals are grazing doesn't imply the presence of crops.

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