QUESTION IMAGE
Question
why are tertiary sources, such as websites and magazines, usually considered less dependable than primary or secondary sources of scientific information?
○ tertiary sources are not usually authored by scientists and therefore do not provide reliable information.
○ tertiary sources have not been fact-checked by reviewers, so the information in tertiary sources is never reliable.
○ tertiary sources usually do not cite information from primary sources, and may perpetuate errors made by secondary sources.
○ tertiary sources provide information based solely on opinion, rather than scientific fact.
- Analyze Option 1: Tertiary sources can be authored by scientists, so this is incorrect.
- Analyze Option 2: Saying "never reliable" is too extreme; some tertiary sources are reliable. Eliminate this.
- Analyze Option 3: Tertiary sources often summarize secondary sources and may not check primary sources, so errors from secondary sources can be perpetuated. This matches the reason for less dependability.
- Analyze Option 4: Tertiary sources don't solely base on opinion; they can have factual info. Eliminate this.
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C. Tertiary sources usually do not cite information from primary sources, and may perpetuate errors made by secondary sources.