Summarizing Question Passages
Summarizing Question Passages
Summarizing Question Passages
The body that impacted Earth at the end of the Cretaceous period was a
meteorite with a mass of more than a trillion tons and a diameter of at least 10
kilometers. Scientists first identified this impact in 1980 from the worldwide layer of
sediment deposited from the dust cloud that enveloped the planet after the impact.
This sediment layer is enriched in the rare metal iridium and other elements that
are relatively abundant in a meteorite but very rare in the crust of Earth. Even
diluted by the terrestrial material excavated from the crater, this component of
meteorites is easily identified. By 1990 geologists had located the impact site itself
in the Yucatán region of Mexico. The crater, now deeply buried in sediment, was
originally about 200 kilometers in diameter.
The first clue historians have about The Taking of Christ is in the 1603
accounts of an Italian nobleman, Ciriaco Mattei, who paid 125 “scudi” for “a
painting with its frame of Christ taken in the garden.” At the time, Caravaggio’s
style, with its striking use of light and dark, was admired and often imitated by both
students and fellow artists. However, trends in the art world come and go, and two
centuries later, Caravaggio’s work had fallen out of favor with collectors. In fact, it
wouldn’t be until the 1950s that a Caravaggio “renaissance” occurred, and interest
in the artist was renewed.
In the meantime, The Taking of Christ had traveled far and wide. Ironically, it
was the Mattei family itself that originally misidentified the work, though several
centuries after the original purchase. In 1802, the family sold it as a Honthorst to a
Scottish collector. This collector kept it in his home until his death in 1921. By
1921, The Taking of Christ—now firmly attributed to Gerard van Honthorst—was
auctioned off in Edinburgh for eight guineas. This would have probably been a fair
price if the work had been a van Honthorst; for a true Caravaggio, though, it was
the bargain of the century. An Irish doctor bought the painting and donated it to the
Dublin Jesuit Society the following decade.
From the 1930s onward, The Taking of Christ hung in the offices of the
Dublin Jesuits. However, the Jesuits, who had a number of old paintings in their
possession, decided to bring in a conservator to discuss restoring them in the early
1990s. Sergio Benedetti, the Senior Conservator at the National Gallery of Ireland,
went to the building to examine the paintings and oversee their restoration.
Decades of dirt, including smoke from the fireplace above which it hung, had to be
removed from the painting before Benedetti began to suspect that the painting was
not a copy of the original, but the original itself.
James Flynn, who collected similar data on other countries, found that.
"massive" gains in the IQ scores of the population in fourteen nations have
occurred during the twentieth century. These improvements, according to Flynn's
analysis, largely stemmed not from genetic improvement in the population but from
environmental changes that led to gains in the kinds of skills assessed by IQ tests.
Torsten Husen and his colleagues also have concluded, after reviewing large
amounts of data, that improvements in economic and social conditions, and
particularly in the availability of schooling, can produce substantial gains in average
IQ from one generation to the next. In general, educators committed to improving
the performance of low-achieving students find these studies encouraging.
Radiocarbon method
The method of Radiocarbon dating was invented in the late 1940s by Willard
Libby. It is a method to determine the age of an object by using radiocarbon
properties. Radiocarbon is created in the atmosphere through the interaction of
nitrogen and cosmic rays. When combined with oxygen, carbon dioxide is
produced. CO2 enters plants through photosynthesis; animals and humans
incorporate carbon when they eat plants. After the death of a plant or animal, the
rate of carbon begins to decline – this is called the radioactive decay of carbon.
When analysts measure the amount of carbon in this decayed object, they can
calculate when it died. The furthest date that has been reliably measured back to is
around 50,000 years.
Research into the proportion of carbon in the atmosphere has been going on for
more than five decades. Due to the increase in the burning of fossil fuels and
nuclear testing in the 20th century, there was a significant increase in the level of
carbon in our atmosphere, so this adds to the complication of carbon calculation.
Originally, scientists used samples of solid carbon for testing. However, they
realized that converting the samples to liquid or gas offered more precise results.
Accelerator mass spectrometry is the current method of analysis. All carbon atoms
in the sample are counted; its results are fast and very accurate.
At the end of the Pleistocene Era, there were many rapid extinction of megafauna,
particularly in the Americas. There is a notable report by Vartanyan et al. on the
extinction of pygmy mammoths, dating them back to 3700 years before present
using radiocarbon dating. Other scientists have used this method to calculate the
age of the extinct species in the La Brea tar pits in California. In their faunal
analysis, they employed a pre-treatment method that included the use of tar. They
collected bones, divided them into small pieces and chips and crushed them. The
bone fragments were treated with a variety of solvents, including benzene, to
examine a species of Cuban Caribbean ground sloth and the Xenarthra armadillo.
Carbon was then examined and radiocarbon dates were obtained from the organic
material separated from the tar. Scientists were able to date the sloth remains to
around 5400 before present. This information is important as it may show that the
extinction of the sloth was caused by human arrival in Cuba.
Much work is necessary to further investigate the abundant fossil materials found
in Central and South American pits, including those of Talara, Peru, where there
are a lot of remains of extinct megafauna and human artefacts. Ongoing studies of
these sites can help to verify the theories of extinction and the impact on human
behaviour.
[6] One notable achievement in radio carbon dating is Two Creeks Fossil Forest.
During the 20th century, a goal of geologists was to establish the date of transition
from the Pleistocene to the Holocene era. The Pleistocene epoch began 2.6 million
years ago and the current, Holocene period began 11,700 years ago. In Wisconsin,
USA, a fossil forest called Two Creeks was discovered. Prior to radiocarbon dating,
the trees in this forest had been dated back to around 24,000 years ago, the
estimated date for the end of the Pleistocene period. This estimate had been made
through correlation with sequences in Scandinavia. Libby and later scientists
investigated Two Creeks and used radiocarbon dating to date the trees more
accurately. Samples from the fossil forest were used in tests in over 70 labs, dating
the trees back to 13,730 before present. This achievement is now considered a
notable result in the development of our understanding of glaciation in North
America o9ipññ