According to a theory advanced by researcher Paul Martin, the wave of species extinctions that occurred in North America about 11,000 years ago, at the end of the Pleistocene era, can be directly attributed to the arrival of humans, i.e., the Paleoindians, who were ancestors of modern Native Americans. However, anthropologist Shepard Krech points out that large animal species vanished even in areas where there is no evidence to demonstrate that Paleoindians hunted them. Nor were extinctions confined to large animals: small animals, plants, and insects disappeared, presumably not all through human consumption. Krech also contradicts Martin's exclusion of climatic change as an explanation by asserting that widespread climatic change did indeed occur at the end of the Pleistocene. Still, Krech attributes secondary if not primary responsibility for the extinctions to the Paleoindians, arguing that humans have produced local extinctions elsewhere. But, according to historian Richard White, even the attribution of secondary responsibility may not be supported by the evidence. White observes that Martin's thesis depends on coinciding dates for the arrival of humans and the decline of large animal species, and Krech, though aware that the dates are controversial, does not challenge them; yet recent archaeological discoveries are providing evidence that the date of human arrival was much earlier than 11,000 years ago.
Which of the following, if true, would most weaken Krech's objections to Martin's theory?
Further studies showing that the climatic change that occurred at the end of the Pleistocene era was even more severe and widespread than was previously behaved
New discoveries indicating that Paleoindians made use of the small animals, plants, and insects that became extinct
Additional evidence indicating that widespread climatic change occurred not only at the end of the Pleistocene era but also in previous and subsequent eras
Researchers' discoveries that many more species became extinct in North America at the end of the Pleistocene era than was previously believed
New discoveries establishing that both the arrival of humans in North America and the wave of Pleistocene extinctions took place much earlier than 11,000 years ago
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正确答案是 E。Krech 否认 Martin 的理论,基本上依赖于人类到达北美和大型动物物种消失的时间以及它们之间的关联。因此,如果有新发现表明人类到达和物种消失也都发生在 11000 年之前,这就会削弱 Krech 的反对 Martin 理论的观点,因此 E 是正确答案。
该题属于细节题,是krech指出灭绝不光出现的大型动物上,包括小型动物,植物,昆虫之类的都出现灭绝的情况,那这些灭绝并不全是由人类消耗的。这里是用来攻击Martin的观点,Martin说物种灭绝是因为人类到来,然后猎杀动物,所以导致的灭绝。削弱krech的观点就是:证据显示小型动物的灭绝也是因为人类的原因---从而加强了martin的灭绝是由人类造成的观点。
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