Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT157 S1 P3 Q19 ExplanationUnderwater Cultural Heritage

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsAnalogyLaw

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Passage

Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO’s 1999 Draft Convention on Underwater Cultural Heritage.

Passage A A North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signed an agreement with the British government, which owns the Sussex, to raise what may be history’s richest sunken treasure and to split the proceeds. The in gold coins lost with the Sussex in a storm in 1694.

As robots, sonar, and other technologically advanced gear have opened the deepest oceans to exploration and recovery, governments have begun asserting ownership over their sunken vessels. But governments often lack the money and skills to retrieve cultural riches and, until now, there had been no legal precedent for a private company to treasure hunting and allow nations to oversee the recovery of their lost fleets.

The company, which is funding the venture, agrees with British historians that the ship carried coins, most likely gold, worth £1 million in 1694. The US$4 billion figure is the coins’ theoretical value if sold to collectors. The agreement calls for archaeological integrity—a difficult technical feat at such depths and a goal archaeological value than coins, which it allows to be sold to help pay for the project.

Passage B “Underwater cultural heritage” (UCH) means all traces of human existence that have been partially, totally, or periodically least 100 years.

1. The protection of UCH is best achieved through in situ (original site) preservation, which should be considered as the first option. Accordingly, activities directed at UCH shall be authorized by the competent authority of the concerned State to knowledge, protection, and/or enhancement of UCH.

2. The commercial exploitation of UCH for trade, sale, barter, or speculation...is fundamentally incompatible with the protection of the UCH.

3. Activities directed at UCH shall not adversely impact UCH more than is necessary for the project;

4. must use nondestructive techniques and prospection and limited sampling in preference to recovery of objects. If excavation is necessary for the purpose of scientific studies, the methods and techniques used must be to the preservation of the remains;

5. shall avoid the unnecessary disturbance of human remains sites;

6. shall be strictly regulated to ensure proper recording of historical, archaeological information.

7. Public access to conduct activities relating to UCH that are nonintrusive (such as photography) be encouraged.

What this question is testing

Analogy

Goal

Match the structure: (article about innovative plan) + (governing code for that kind of plan).

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The question
19.

Which one of the following mentions a pair of documents that are related in a way most analogous to the way in which passage A

Answer choices, explained

  1. Wrong Emphasis4% picked this

    a proposal from an architectural firm competing for a project and the work specifications

    A proposal from a firm competing for a project is an active bid, not a neutral journalistic account. And "work specifications" are project-specific requirements, not a general regulatory framework. The relationship is competitor-to-specs, not article-to-code.

  2. Correct61% picked this

    a magazine article discussing an innovative architectural proposal and the set of codes that

    Why this is right

    A magazine article discussing an innovative architectural proposal corresponds to Passage A's newspaper article about the Sussex agreement. A set of building codes corresponds to Passage B's convention -- a general regulatory framework governing the domain. The article describes a specific project; the codes govern all projects of that type.

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

  3. Wrong Emphasis21% picked this

    a newspaper account of an agreement between two architectural firms to work together on a proposal for a project and the

    A "newspaper account of an agreement between two firms" is closer to Passage A's format, but "work specifications" are project-specific, not a general code. Also, the two firms cooperating mirrors Passage A's agreement but does not capture Passage B's regulatory role.

  4. Wrong Emphasis3% picked this

    a publicity brochure describing an architectural design and the set of blueprints

    A "publicity brochure" is promotional material from the project itself, not a journalistic account. And "blueprints" are technical drawings for the same project, not a general regulatory framework. Both documents serve the project rather than one describing and one governing.

  5. Wrong Emphasis11% picked this

    a press release, made jointly by two firms that have worked together on an architectural proposal, describing the proposal in general terms and an

    A joint press release is advocacy by the participants, not neutral journalism. And an "abstract conceptual description that will govern the design" is a project-level guiding document, not a general regulatory code applicable to all projects in the field.

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