QUESTION IMAGE
Question
grade pre-assessment
on a cold winter’s day in 1980, a group of recreational cavers entered a narrow, wet stream passage south of knoxville, tennessee. they navigated a slippery mud slope and a tight keyhole through the cave wall, trudged through the stream itself, ducked through another keyhole, and climbed more mud. eventually, they entered a high and relatively dry passage deep in the cave’s “dark zone” – beyond the reach of external light.
on the walls around them, they began to see lines and figures traced into remnant mud banks laid down long ago when the stream flowed at this higher level. no modern or historic graffiti marred the surfaces. they saw images of animals, people, and transformational characters blending human characteristics with those of birds, and those of snakes with mammals.
ancient cave art has long been one of the most compelling of all artifacts from the human past, fascinating both to scientists and to the public at large. its visual expressions resonate across the ages, as if the ancients speak to us from deep in time. remarkably, this group of cavers in 1980 had happened upon the first ancient cave art site in north america.
since then, archaeologists like me have discovered dozens more of these cave art sites in the southeast. we’ve been able to learn details about when cave art first appeared in the region, when it was most frequently produced, and what it might have been used for. we have also learned a great deal by working with the living descendants of the cave art makers, the present-day native american peoples of the southeast, about what the cave art means and how important it was and is to indigenous communities.
cave art in america?
assessment questions
1 ... 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 ... 34
24 out of 34 answered
question 25
the author’s discussion of archeologists’ work contributes to the central idea by highlighting –
a. how archeologists find and research cave art around the world.
b. how archeologists preserve cave art to share with the rest of the world.
c. that archeologists are responsible for protecting potential locations of cave art.
d. that archeologists are experts on the ancient humans that lived around the world.
To solve this, we analyze each option:
- Option A: The passage says archaeologists discovered more cave art sites in the Southeast, learned about when cave art appeared, its frequency, use, and worked with Native Americans to understand its meaning. This aligns with how archaeologists find (discovered sites) and research (learned details, worked with descendants) cave art.
- Option B: The passage doesn't mention preserving cave art to share with the world.
- Option C: The passage focuses on research and learning about cave art, not protecting potential locations.
- Option D: The passage is about cave art in the Southeast of North America, not about being experts on ancient humans worldwide.
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A. how archeologists find and research cave art around the world.