In Mernia commercial fossil hunters often sell important fossils they have found, not to universities or museums, but to individual collectors, who pay much better but generally do not allow researchers access to their collections. To increase the number of fossils available for research, some legislators propose requiring all fossils that are found in Merina to be sold only to universities or museums.
Which of the following, if true, most strongly indicates that the legislators' proposal will fail to achieve its goal?
(A) Some fossil hunters in Mernia are not commercial fossil hunters, but rather are amateurs who keep the fossils that they find.
Tempting trap choice. The key here is ‘at the time of selling’, the seller cannot sell to anyone else, but the universities!
(B) Most fossils found in Mernia are common types that have little scientific interest.
OK. What counts is that the ones with A LOT of scientific interest are sold to universities. This choice does not wreck that plan.
(C) Commercial fossil hunters in Mernia currently sell some of the fossils they find to universities and museums.
Strengthener alert!
(D) Many universities in Mernia do not engage in fossil research.
This is neither here nor there. The point is that there are universities/researchers that do, do this type of research. The legislation would surely help those researchers!
(E) Most fossils are found by commercial fossil hunters, and they would give up looking for fossils if they were no longer allowed to sell to individual collectors.
Correct. Now we have an even bigger problem…no fossils!