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1. NO: The values of ACS doesn’t change as in proportion to river.

B. NO: The values of ACS doesn’t change as in proportion to FB

C: YES
A 100-year flood, for example, describes the level of floodwater expected to be equaled or exceeded once every 100 years.
 A 5-year flood, for example, describes the level of floodwater expected to be equaled or exceeded once every 5 years.
If a flood with a 1% chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year (every 100 year) would be 20 times higher than if the same level needs to be compared every 5 years
Means now we have 20 times more value to compare about the same level

D. NO
inundated = covered with water
The frequency of flooding onto floodplains—the lands situated adjacent to rivers and other waterways—depends on factors such as climate, drainage area, channel slope, and the absorptive capacity of soil.

E: NO , The values of ACS doesn’t change as in proportion to SF
0.9-13
1.2-54
2.0-67
3.1 -8
5.5-3
12.7-16


2. Explicitly: clearly defined in Discussion ( means shouldnot be present in table discussion)
NO: In many regions, floods occur primarily during the snowmelt runoff season. + SF snowmelt floods mentioned in Table of Waterway Statistics
YES: such as climate, drainage area, channel slope, and the absorptive capacity of soil. + not defined in Table of Waterway Statistics
NO : such as climate, drainage area, channel slope, and the absorptive capacity of soil.+ discussed in table Table of Waterway Statistics


3.
Drainage area
J river: 330
P river: 210
It is true J area is more under flood plain boundary but nothing is mentioned about how people would be affected. It maybe possible that only few people affected along J river

NO

NO: no drains of one river into another river is mentioned

YES: Such a flood is also considered the 1% annual exceedance probability flood (i.e., a flood with a 1% chance of being equaled or exceeded in any given year)
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Note to self: Read the questions twice and slowly. The first reading should be fast, the second slow.­
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In question 3 we are asked if the info indicate the given statement but that's not a rigid question, once before a question with similar language asked if information support but since info wasn't rigid i marked otherwise and it was incorrect so how do i keep my approach when language is confusing??

If i go by what i learned before q3p1 shall be correct.
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So for q3, if the question asked us to infer- A 100-year flood on the Jackson River would directly affect more people than would such a flood on the Porter River.
Then our answer would have been yes but since they have asked us to only answer on the basis of the information provided, then its No.
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Someone please help me with question 3, especially the third part of the 3rd question?
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Someone please help me with question 3, especially the third part of the 3rd question?

For each of the following statements, select Yes if the information provided indicates that the statement is true. Otherwise select No.



• A 100-year flood on the Jackson River would directly affect more people than would such a flood on the Porter River.

There is no information in the passage or table that compares the populations or effects of a 100-year flood on these two rivers.

Answer: No.

• In Region X, Evans Creek drains into Jackson River.

The passage and table do not provide information about the drainage connections between specific rivers, such as Evans Creek and Jackson River.

Answer: No.

• The area representing the 1% annual exceedance probability for Deer Creek is 17 sq km.

Tab 1 (Discussion) mentions that the 100-year flood is also considered the 1% annual exceedance probability flood. So, the 6th column, "100-year FB" (sq km), shows the area affected by this flood. Since the table lists Deer Creek’s 100-year floodplain as 17 sq km, the statement is true.

Answer: Yes.
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Thank you Bunuel! This helps a lot.
Bunuel


For each of the following statements, select Yes if the information provided indicates that the statement is true. Otherwise select No.



• A 100-year flood on the Jackson River would directly affect more people than would such a flood on the Porter River.

There is no information in the passage or table that compares the populations or effects of a 100-year flood on these two rivers.

Answer: No.

• In Region X, Evans Creek drains into Jackson River.

The passage and table do not provide information about the drainage connections between specific rivers, such as Evans Creek and Jackson River.

Answer: No.

• The area representing the 1% annual exceedance probability for Deer Creek is 17 sq km.

Tab 1 (Discussion) mentions that the 100-year flood is also considered the 1% annual exceedance probability flood. So, the 6th column, "100-year FB" (sq km), shows the area affected by this flood. Since the table lists Deer Creek’s 100-year floodplain as 17 sq km, the statement is true.

Answer: Yes.
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GMAT-Club-Forum-0hmladg2.png
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Bunuel - Can you help with Q1 and how to do that under 2 mins - considering I spent good time reading the MSR
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Goldenfuture
Bunuel - Can you help with Q1 and how to do that under 2 mins - considering I spent good time reading the MSR

The discussion states that a 100 year flood corresponds to a 1% annual exceedance probability, meaning a 1% chance in any given year. That relationship comes directly from the idea of once every N years corresponding to about 1 out of N each year. Using the same logic, a 5 year flood corresponds to 1 out of 5 per year, which is 20% annual exceedance probability.
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how is 17 sqkm helpinh here? its just that its 100 year old flood and thats why we selected yes for the third one right?
Bunuel


For each of the following statements, select Yes if the information provided indicates that the statement is true. Otherwise select No.



• A 100-year flood on the Jackson River would directly affect more people than would such a flood on the Porter River.

There is no information in the passage or table that compares the populations or effects of a 100-year flood on these two rivers.

Answer: No.

• In Region X, Evans Creek drains into Jackson River.

The passage and table do not provide information about the drainage connections between specific rivers, such as Evans Creek and Jackson River.

Answer: No.

• The area representing the 1% annual exceedance probability for Deer Creek is 17 sq km.

Tab 1 (Discussion) mentions that the 100-year flood is also considered the 1% annual exceedance probability flood. So, the 6th column, "100-year FB" (sq km), shows the area affected by this flood. Since the table lists Deer Creek’s 100-year floodplain as 17 sq km, the statement is true.

Answer: Yes.
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Legallyblond
how is 17 sqkm helpinh here? its just that its 100 year old flood and thats why we selected yes for the third one right?


The 17 sq km is exactly what makes the statement true, because the statement is asking about the area, not just about whether Deer Creek has a 100-year flood. Since the discussion says a 100-year flood is the same as a 1% annual exceedance probability flood, Deer Creek’s 100-year FB value of 17 sq km gives the required area.
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