In the 1880's, improved pest-control methods saved the region's citrus crop, although its grape, celery, and sugar beet crops had already been destroyed by pests.(A) In the 1880's, improved pest-control methods saved the region's citrus crop, although its grape, celery, and sugar beet crops had already been destroyed by pests
(B) Pests destroyed the region's grape, celery, and sugar beet crops when, in the 1880's, improved pest-control methods saved its citrus crop
(C) The region's citrus crop was saved by improved pest-control methods in the 1880's, its grape, celery, and sugar beet crops already having been destroyed by pests
(D) Improved pest-control methods saved the region's citrus crop in the 1880's, though they had already destroyed its grape, celery, and sugar beet crops
(E) Improved pest-control methods, in the 1880's, saved the region's citrus crop, its grape, celery, and sugar beet crops were already destroyed by pests
I answered (A), which is correct.
However, I am not convinced. What is the antecedent of "its"? By logic we can say that the antecedent is region. However, region is in the possessive form (region's). According to MGMAT, this doesn't follow to possessive poison rule, which states that a pronoun can't have an antecedent in the possessive form.
Hope someone could chime in on this.
Regards,
Dave
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