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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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thank you @carcass
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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Sreya wrote:
hey @carcass doesn't option A, strengthens the argument. I thought the answer is b. how to tackle weaken type question?

OPTON B doesn't clearly specifies the difference in magnitudes of batteries. For instance, it may be possible that batteries in 1950s were 99.9 percent harmful and batteries in 1980's are 99.8 percent harmful(or visa versa).(So batteries are still harmful so doesn't weakens)
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
Someone please explain, I thought it was 'C'.
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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Carcass, is (A) the correct answer?
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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strategist wrote:
Carcass, is (A) the correct answer?


yes Sir

Thank you
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
I couldn't decide between A and D. Why is D wrong?
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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We need an explanation why the argument is weak.

A says that the studies referred to 1950 and basically they are no longer valid or old.

D instead talks about the leakage by the manufacture which is out of scope.

We care of the piles up, the amount in the dump NOT a flaw manufacture process

Regards
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
We care of the piles up, the amount in the dump NOT a flaw manufacture process


Isn't the ending argument about the quality of ground water? So shouldn't the likelihood of a battery leak also play a role in this? Suppose there is a huge pile of batteries but they aren't that likely to leak vs. a relatively smaller pile but they are very likely to leak. Chances are, the the former would be better for ground water right?
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In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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The problem here is that the study in 1950 DOES NOT reflect the actual conditions

Compared to typical 1980's landfills, typical 1950's landfills contain a negligible number of batteries.
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
anasp99 wrote:
Someone please explain, I thought it was 'C'.




Option C if does something, it strengthens the argument. It shows that toxicity could have been higher in 1950s than 80s, if that were really the case - the argument that since the 1950s landfills were not contaminated, the 80s will also not be is weakened.
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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
Hello from the GRE Prep Club VerbalBot!

Thanks to another GRE Prep Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

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Re: In the 1980's billions of batteries were thrown into landfil [#permalink]
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