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Passage breakdown


In the first paragraph (P1), the author describes a method to learn about past climatic conditions

  • Dendrochronology, or "the study of tree-ring records to glean information about the past."

In the second paragraph, the author lists several limitations of the method introduced in P1.


For more on the process of breaking down RC passages, check out this article and our live RC videos.


Explanations for individual questions


General Discussion
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In 2:55 minutes,
The rings are the main clues for understanding the age of a tree, the various shapes of the rings formed changes with the change of weather (water supplied to it, in different climatic condition).So, clearly it triggers the fact that the rings are the only link to find the age and if due to some reason the rings are uncertain to figure out by the researchers then it brings lack of correlation , i.e tree rings and its age.
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Dendrochronology, the study of tree-ring records to glean information about the past, is possible because each year a tree adds a new layer of wood between the existing wood and the bark. In temperate and subpolar climates, cells added at the growing season's start are large and thin-walled, but later the new cells that develop are smaller and thick-walled; the growing season is followed by a period of dormancy. When a tree trunk is viewed in cross section, a boundary line is normally visible between the small-celled wood added at the end of the growing season in the previous year and the large-celled spring wood of the following year's growing season. The annual growth pattern appears as a series of larger and larger rings. In wet years rings are broad; during drought years they are narrow, since the trees grow less. Often, ring patterns of dead trees of different, but overlapping, ages can be correlated to provide an extended index of past climate conditions.

However, trees that grew in areas with a steady supply of groundwater show little variation in ring width from year to year; these "complacent" rings tell nothing about changes in climate. And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count. Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again.

In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(A) dendrochronologists' failure to consider the prevalence of erratic weather patterns
(B) inconsistencies introduced because of changes in methodology
(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age


In opening line it says "Dendrochronology, the study of tree-ring records to glean information about the past, is possible because each year a tree adds a new layer of wood between the existing wood and the bark."-------means every year tree adds a new layer (ring)

In last but one line it says "And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count." ------means the regular pattern of "one ring per year" phenomenon may be not shown due to extremely dry weather.

So if scientists count the age of tree by counting number of rings and if the tree is having sometimes two rings in a year or no ring at all in any given year, this may lead to wrong age determination of the tree.


Hence E.

HTH
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The passage is primarily concerned with

(A) evaluating the effect of climate on the growth of trees of different species
(B) questioning the validity of a method used to study tree-ring records
(C) explaining how climatic conditions can be deduced from tree-ring patterns
(D) outlining the relation between tree size and cell structure within the tree
(E) tracing the development of a scientific method of analyzing tree-ring patterns

Can someone explain?
I don't see how C Is the main point.
First dendrochronology was introduced and then it was questioned in the second paragraph.
if you take C as the answer it is missing the most of the second paragraph.
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hi,
I chose D for Q2. Please help why is it E?
Also, I didn't understand Q1.

thanks in advance
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For Question2:

Basis this line in the passage "Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again."

Shouldn't the answer be :
(C) The rings corresponding to the overlapping years would exhibit similar patterns only if the trees were of the same species.

As (A) does not talk about any species?
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hi SajjadAhmad, u1983, GMATNinja, GMATNinjaTwo, workout, Gnpth

what's the problem of the B in Q3?

IMOP, P1 states general patterns of rings under different environments,
while, P2 says patterns are similar under certain environment, and under some other certain environments, pattern has "uncertain" pattern, question the accuracy of the age if count the rings.
because I think Q2 questions the patterns, so I picked up B,
I think C does not include what P2 says, so I cross off C
I saw B is the second ranking, suggesting not few people agree with B.
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GMATNinja

For Question2:

Basis this line in the passage "Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again."

Shouldn't the answer be :
(C) The rings corresponding to the overlapping years would exhibit similar patterns only if the trees were of the same species.

As (A) does not talk about any species?
To choose (C), we need to find support in the passage indicating that ring patterns between overlapping trees are ONLY similar if those trees are of the same species.

In other words, NO two trees of different species would exhibit similar patterns in the years in which they overlap.

As you point out, the passage mentions that "certain species" have different ring growth patterns. But does that mean that ring patterns are ONLY similar amongst trees of the same species?

Not necessarily. It is entirely possible that some, or even most, tree species exhibit similar patterns in the same year -- even if certain trees have different patterns. Because the passage doesn't indicate that ring patterns are similar ONLY if trees are of the same species, (C) is out.

I hope that helps!
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Why (B) cannot be correct answer???
I have the same problem as zoezhuyan

we can see from the first word “however” in para2, doesn’t it indeed “ question” the validity of Dendrochronology,a method to study the tree-ring records for gleaning information about the past, in para1???

We can easily see from this passage that (C) correspond to para1’s main idea, and for (B), it correspond to para2

Or maybe we can think for another way, it is that—which one, para1 or 2, is this passage’s main focus???however, its not quite obvious in this whole passage for us to discern which one is the main focus
so in Q3, it just hard for us to choose between (B) and (C)
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zoezhuyan

what's the problem of the B in Q3?

IMOP, P1 states general patterns of rings under different environments,
while, P2 says patterns are similar under certain environment, and under some other certain environments, pattern has "uncertain" pattern, question the accuracy of the age if count the rings.
because I think Q2 questions the patterns, so I picked up B,
I think C does not include what P2 says, so I cross off C
I saw B is the second ranking, suggesting not few people agree with B.
When answering "main idea" questions on RC, looking for the answer choice that "covers what all the paragraphs said" will cause you endless frustration and often lead you to the wrong answer choice.

That's because the question is not, "Which answer choice seems to cover the content of every paragraph?"

Rather, the question is, "Why did the author write this passage in the first place?"

mimishyu
Why (B) cannot be correct answer???
I have the same problem as zoezhuyan

we can see from the first word “however” in para2, doesn’t it indeed “ question” the validity of Dendrochronology,a method to study the tree-ring records for gleaning information about the past, in para1???

We can easily see from this passage that (C) correspond to para1’s main idea, and for (B), it correspond to para2

Or maybe we can think for another way, it is that—which one, para1 or 2, is this passage’s main focus???however, its not quite obvious in this whole passage for us to discern which one is the main focus
so in Q3, it just hard for us to choose between (B) and (C)
Again, why did the author write the passage?

  • The author wrote P1 in order to introduce the technique of dendrochronology and show how this method can reveal past climate conditions.
  • The author wrote P2 in order to explain a few scenarios where dendrochronology's results can be compromised. In other words, the author wrote P2 to qualify the statements made in P1, rounding out the overall explanation of how dendrochronology works.

The author wanted to explain how dendrochronology can be used to deduce climate history (including when it might not work).

Let's take a look at choice (B) one more time:

Quote:
The passage is primarily concerned with B. questioning the validity of a method used to study tree-ring records
Did the author write this passage in order to question the validity of a method?

Nope. While reading P2 in isolation might lead us to choose (B), remember that the reason the author wrote P2 in the first place is to expand on P1. None of the language here signals a desire by the author to convince us that these exceptions should make us question the validity of dendrochronology overall.

The overarching purpose is to present a well-rounded explanation of how and when it works. When it might not work is presented as part of that explanation, not a challenge to the method's validity.

That's why choice (C) is the best fit and choice (B) can be eliminated.
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Hi VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201

Can you please give your opinion on Q1: why not D

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.
What I understand:
Add no rings then it will be difficult to calculate the age.

If No rings then what happens ? Then we get wrong count of rings. It means lack of something ( ring) that could have been considered to determine the age.
so what is uncertainity to the count here? I think uncertainity count means somethign that was detectable ( such as ring)



Quote:
1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age

So I choose D. lack of something visible that could have added in the count to compensate missing count of rings.

Please suggest VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201
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Hi VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201

Can you please give your opinion on Q1: why not D

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.
What I understand:
Add no rings then it will be difficult to calculate the age.

If No rings then what happens ? Then we get wrong count of rings. It means lack of something ( ring) that could have been considered to determine the age.
so what is uncertainity to the count here? I think uncertainity count means somethign that was detectable ( such as ring)



Quote:
1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age

So I choose D. lack of something visible that could have added in the count to compensate missing count of rings.

Please suggest VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201

1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(A) dendrochronologists' failure to consider the prevalence of erratic weather patterns
(B) inconsistencies introduced because of changes in methodology
(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age


However, trees that grew in areas with a steady supply of groundwater show little variation in ring width from year to year; these "complacent" rings tell nothing about changes in climate.
And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count. Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again.


Complacent rings appear in trees with steady supply of ground water. So climate has no impact on their rings.

The "uncertainties" mentioned refers to an inability to determine the exact age because in very dry regions (These trees do not have steady supply of ground water and hence have no complacent rings), trees may skip adding any rings in some years. Hence, it refers to the lack of perfect correlation between the tree's rings and its age.
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Hi VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201

Can you please give your opinion on Q1: why not D

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.
What I understand:
Add no rings then it will be difficult to calculate the age.

If No rings then what happens ? Then we get wrong count of rings. It means lack of something ( ring) that could have been considered to determine the age.
so what is uncertainity to the count here? I think uncertainity count means somethign that was detectable ( such as ring)



Quote:
1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age

So I choose D. lack of something visible that could have added in the count to compensate missing count of rings.

Please suggest VeritasKarishma GMATNinja bm2201

1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(A) dendrochronologists' failure to consider the prevalence of erratic weather patterns
(B) inconsistencies introduced because of changes in methodology
(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age


However, trees that grew in areas with a steady supply of groundwater show little variation in ring width from year to year; these "complacent" rings tell nothing about changes in climate.
And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count. Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again.


Complacent rings appear in trees with steady supply of ground water. So climate has no impact on their rings.

The "uncertainties" mentioned refers to an inability to determine the exact age because in very dry regions (These trees do not have steady supply of ground water and hence have no complacent rings), trees may skip adding any rings in some years. Hence, it refers to the lack of perfect correlation between the tree's rings and its age.


hello ma'm VeritasKarishma

So here the count refers to this perfect correlation ?( perfect correlation between the tree's rings and its age)
uncertainty == lack

please confirm
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mSKR


So here the count refers to this perfect correlation ?( perfect correlation between the tree's rings and its age)
uncertainty == lack

please confirm

Yes. Since the trees add 1 ring every year, we can count the rings to get their age. But if they skip adding rings some years, the perfect correlation goes for a toss.
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lSimmons000
Dendrochronology is the investigation of information from tree ring development. Because of the general and assorted utilizations of this information, experts can emerge out of numerous scholastic controls. There are no degrees in dendrochronology on the grounds that however it is helpful no matter how you look at it, the actual strategy is genuinely restricted. The vast majority who go into contemplating tree rings normally come from one of a few controls
Actually I don't understand much highlighted in red. what controls ? Who who?

Anyways, thanks for the definition. :)
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GMATNinja KarishmaB

1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
why c is incorrect?

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.

If the trees go without adding any rings, they are deviating from the normal behaviour (norm), so it should explain uncertainty.
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GMATNinja KarishmaB

1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
why c is incorrect?

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.

If the trees go without adding any rings, they are deviating from the normal behaviour (norm), so it should explain uncertainty.

Question 1.

1. In the highlighted text, "uncertainties" refers to

(A) dendrochronologists' failure to consider the prevalence of erratic weather patterns
(B) inconsistencies introduced because of changes in methodology
(C) some tree species' tendency to deviate from the norm
(D) the lack of detectable variation in trees with complacent rings
(E) the lack of perfect correlation between the number of a tree's rings and its age

Paragraph 1 explains the norm. Paragra[ph 2 talks about deviations from the norm.

And trees in extremely dry regions may go a year or two without adding any rings, thereby introducing uncertainties into the count.


The author mentions the word 'uncertainties' to talk about how trees in dry region may not add any rings in some years causing uncertainty in the count. So there are 100 rings but does it mean that tree was 100 years old when it died? What if in some years it did not add any rings and we have not accounted for those in our count of 100? This is what 'uncertainties' refers to.

Hence answer is (E).

Why is it not (C)?
We are given that "Certain species sometimes add more than one ring in a single year, when growth halts temporarily and then starts again" which is another deviation but the word 'uncertainties' is not used to talk about this. We need to give the exact function of the word.
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