Exactly when in the early modern era Native Americans began exchanging animal furs with Europeans for European-made goods is uncertain. What is fairly certain, even though they left no written evidence of having done so, is that the first Europeans to conduct such trade during the modern period were fishing crews working the waters around Newfoundland. Archaeologists had noticed that sixteenth-century Native American sites were strewn with iron bolts and metal pins. Only later, upon reading Nicolas Denys's 1672 account of seventeenth-century European settlements in North America, did archaeologists realize that sixteenth-century European fishing crews had dismantled and exchanged parts of their ships for furs.
  By the time Europeans sailing the Atlantic coast of North America first documented the fur trade, it was apparently well underway. The first to record such trade—the captain of a Portuguese vessel sailing from Newfoundland in 1501—observed that a Native American aboard the ship wore Venetian silver earrings. Another early chronicler noted in 1524 that Native Americans living along the coast of what is now New England had become selective about European trade goods: they accepted only knives, fishhooks, and sharp metal. By the time Cartier sailed the Saint Lawrence River ten years later, Native Americans had traded with Europeans for more than thirty years, perhaps half a century.


Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the author's assertion in the first sentence of the second paragraph?


When Europeans retraced Cartier's voyage in the first years of the seventeenth century, they frequently traded with Native Americans.

Furs from beavers, which were plentiful in North America but nearly extinct in Europe, became extremely fashionable in Europe in the final decades of the sixteenth century.

Firing arms were rarely found on sixteenth-century Native American sites or on European lists of trading goods since such arms required frequent maintenance and repair.

Europeans and Native Americans had established trade protocols, such as body language assuring one another of their peaceful intentions, that antedate the earliest records of trade.

During the first quarter of the sixteenth century, an Italian explorer recorded seeing many Native Americans with what appeared to be copper beads, though they may have been made of indigenous copper.

考题讲解

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正确答案是A:当欧洲人在17世纪初重走Cartier的航程时,他们经常和美洲土著交易。

A选项最有力地强化作者在第二段的第一句中的断言,即现代历史上美洲土著开始用兽皮和欧洲人进行交易的时间不确定。作者使用前文的一些列表述,例如拥有金属钉和铁栓的美洲土著遗址,来说明土著已经在与欧洲人交易了很久,而A选项提出更多的信息,即欧洲人在17世纪初重走 Cartier 的航程时经常和美洲土著交易,这个信息强化了这种交易已经发生了很久的断言,因此A选项是正确答案。

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