I think it is D.
Statement 1.
Area of a trapezoid = (Top * Height) + 2 * (1/2 * height * (bottom-top)) (i.e., the sum of the area of the two triangles, which are right angled and can be solved with x^2 + y^2 = z^2).
If we know the Area, and the Top, and the Bottom, then we're solving for height. And then if we know height, and base (top-bottom/2), then we can figure out the hypotenuse. This assumes that it is a perfect trapezoid, but even if it it skewed (i.e., one triangle is bigger than the other), the perimeter (I
think) wouldn't change...
sufficient
Statement 2.
Given the above formula, we have area, base, and height. We can then figure out area, and therefore perimeter.
sufficient
Again, all of this falls through if triangles with the same base and height can have different perimeters...
ben928
A piece of carpet is in the shape of a trapezoid. The top measures 50 inches, the bottom measures 70 inches. What is the carpet's perimeter?
(1) The area of the carpet is 450 sq inches.
(2) The height of the carpet is 7.5 inches.
I'll follow up with comments later tonight or tomorrow, and with the answer given, which I don't agree with. : (