Bunuel
According to the traditional hypothesis, the first humans to inhabit North America came across a land bridge between northeast Asia and Alaska approximately 12,000 years ago. But a group of archaeologists now theorizes that some humans arrived in Baja California approximately 13,500 years ago. This hypothesis must be false, however, because the oldest human fossil remains that have been found in North America are only 12,000 years old.
The argument above assumes that:
A. There will be no new archaeological discoveries in North America that disprove conventional theories.
B. The land bridge used by humans 12,000 years ago was not in existence 13,500 years ago.
C. There have not been discoveries of fossilized human tools from more than 13,000 years ago made in North America.
D. Archaeologists have an incentive to make up incorrect theories regarding early human migration.
E. Human beings did not have a way to reach North America prior to the formation of the land bridge known to have been used by people 12,000 years ago.
VERITAS PREP OFFICIAL SOLUTION:
Like many assumption problems, this problem features an argument with a broad conclusion ("this hypothesis must be false") hanging precariously on one premise (essentially "there are no human fossil remains to support that hypothesis"). A helpful thing to keep in mind on assumption questions - and a reason that the Assumption Negation Technique can be so helpful - is that often the correct answer is necessary to keep the lone existing premise relevant.
Here's how that works on this problem: the lone premise is very specifically worded to include "no human fossil remains." But are human fossil remains the only type of evidence that could indicate or prove human existence?
When choice C is negated, it provides that other type of evidence: "there HAVE been discoveries of fossilized human tools" that date back well before the established theory's timeframe. If this were true, then those purveying the new theory would have evidence for it, thereby directly weakening this argument.
Choice C therefore is correct. And note again its structural function - as it reads pre-negation, it helps to protect the current premise (there are no human fossils that support the new theory) from becoming irrelevant.
Choice A is too broad: there may very well be future discoveries that disprove some current theories, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they will disprove the current prevailing theory about when people arrived in North America. Even if that theory is ultimately disproven, too, that doesn't mean it will be replaced with the proposed new theory.
Choice B fails the negation test: if you negate B, you'll see that the land bridge WAS in existence 13,500 years ago. But is that evidence that people were there, particularly in light of the existing premise that there is no fossil evidence from that 1,500 year period?
Choice D similarly is unnecessary: it doesn't have to be that the archaeologists lied, as they could just be wrong. If you negate it and it then says "archaeologists do not have a reason to make up incorrect theories" the argument could still hold - they'd be wrong and maybe even bad scientists, just not liars.
Choice E also fails the negation test: if you negate it, it actually gives a little more hope to the new theory by saying that people DID have a way to get to North America even without the land bridge. That certainly doesn't prove the case, but it leaves the door open even a bit further that the new theory could be correct.