animal extinction!

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animal extinction!

by gmat_perfect » Fri Jul 16, 2010 3:13 am
Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.

A...
B. which caused the plant and animal extinctions marking
C. and causing plant and animal extinctions that mark
D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

[spoiler]OA: E[/spoiler]

What are main differences between D and E?

Is the use of "the" before 'plant and animal extinctions' correct?
If it is correct, why?

Thanks.
Source: — Sentence Correction |

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by sumanr84 » Fri Jul 16, 2010 3:30 am
This question is testing modifier within modifier.

an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

..an event that.. - Here, THAT explains about the event, what the event caused..

..extinctions that.. - Here, THAT explains extinctions meaning what that extinction led to..

The issue of THE is not clear to me..

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by kvcpk » Fri Jul 16, 2010 4:34 am
I think in Option D, "it" doesnot have a clear antecedent.

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by Patrick_GMATFix » Fri Jul 16, 2010 4:38 am
gmat_perfect wrote:Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.

D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

What are main differences between D and E?

Is the use of "the" before 'plant and animal extinctions' correct?
If it is correct, why?
Hi gmat_perfect. I think I can help.

"and" is only used to end a list. IN D we have "an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks the end of the era". For D to be correct, we must be able to identify where the list ending with "and it marks" begin. There is no such beginning. A much better sentence would state: "an event that caused extinctions, and that marks the end of an era" With this structure it would be clear that the last action also refers to the event.

E is correct. "that mark the end of an era" is a subordinate clause that describes "the plant and animal extinctions". Meaning is clear.

As for the split between "extinctions" (D) and "the extinctions" (E), "the" should be included because we are referring to the specific extinctions that mark the end of that era, not any random extinctions.

OK: The US mortgage crisis of 2006 caused recessions that have destabilized financial markets over the last 4 years.
Better: The US mortgage crisis of 2006 caused the recessions that have destabilized financial markets...

-Patrick
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by gmat_perfect » Sat Jul 17, 2010 2:24 am
Patrick_GMATFix wrote:
gmat_perfect wrote:Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.

D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

What are main differences between D and E?

Is the use of "the" before 'plant and animal extinctions' correct?
If it is correct, why?
Hi gmat_perfect. I think I can help.

"and" is only used to end a list. IN D we have "an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks the end of the era". For D to be correct, we must be able to identify where the list ending with "and it marks" begin. There is no such beginning. A much better sentence would state: "an event that caused extinctions, and that marks the end of an era" With this structure it would be clear that the last action also refers to the event.

E is correct. "that mark the end of an era" is a subordinate clause that describes "the plant and animal extinctions". Meaning is clear.

As for the split between "extinctions" (D) and "the extinctions" (E), "the" should be included because we are referring to the specific extinctions that mark the end of that era, not any random extinctions.

OK: The US mortgage crisis of 2006 caused recessions that have destabilized financial markets over the last 4 years.
Better: The US mortgage crisis of 2006 caused the recessions that have destabilized financial markets...

-Patrick
Thanks for your explanation.

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by Patrick_GMATFix » Sat Jul 17, 2010 4:35 am
You are welcome
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by [email protected] » Thu Dec 22, 2011 11:05 pm
Final solution at one place:

Important: The purpose of this post (and all the other posts by me) is to give a complete solution to all GMAT-Prep Verbal questions at one place. Sometimes students have to wade through dozens of posts to get to the final answer. My posts will give one complete and crisp solution required to arrive at the correct answer by eliminating the wrong one. Some of the content in these posts may have been taken from various other sources (discussion forums).

Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.
(A) which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks
(B) which caused the plant and animal extinctions marking
(C) and causing plant and animal extinctions that mark
(D) an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
(E) an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

This sentence is about the use of an abstract noun (usually a new word that is not given in the original option) to refer to the entire preceding clause. Such a construction is almost always considered correct on the GMAT. So, most probably, we have to choose between D and E (both contain a new noun 'an event' after the comma) . Read more about abstract noun constructions below.

As per meaning clarity, the event (the slamming of the asteroid) didn't mark the end of the geologic era; rather the extinctions marked the end of the era (logical).

Also, A and B use the word 'which' ... the word 'which' is a pronoun, so it can refer only to a noun. But in these options, the word 'which' tries to go back to 'slammed (verb)' ... WRONG.

In C, and 'slammed' and 'causing' are not parallel.

In D, 'event' refers to the 'slamming' and 'it' refer to the event (and so to 'the slamming') ... wrong meaning. Also, D is not parallel (that caused and it marks). Also, the comma usage is wrong in D.

E corrects the meaning: 'extinctions that mark' ... the word 'that' refers to the 'extinctions'. Perfect.

Correct: E

Abstract nouns modifying the entire preceding clause (after a comma)

(If you have an appositive modifier that's an abstract noun - such as "strategy", "figure", "statistic", "findings", "situation", "change", "difference", etc. - then such an appositive may be allowed to describe the entire situation described in the previous clause.)

1. I only have one onion, a deficiency that will make it impossible to cook this dish.

2. The scientists discovered whale-fish bones in the Arctic, findings that prove the existence of whale-fish.

3. Scientists have found high levels of iridium in certain geographical formations around the world, results that suggest the cataclysmic impact of a meteor millions of year ago.

4. An asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, Sixty-five million years ago, an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.

5. The coach tried to put 5 receivers on the line, a strategy that failed.

6. X observed large concentrations of metals in the sediments, findings consistent with the history of deposits in the region.

7. Recent studies have shown that X is 60 percent of Y, a finding that has shocked many in the scientific community. OR Recent studies have shown that X is 60 percent of Y, a statistic that has shocked many in the scientific community.

8. Neanderthals had a vocal tract resembling an ape's and so were probably without language, a shortcoming that may explain why they were supplanted by our own species.

9. Scientists have observed large concentrations of heavy-metal deposits in the upper twenty centimeters of sediments from the Baltic Sea, findings consistent with the growth of industrial activity in the area.

10. I went to the bar with John Smith, an excursion that was much more fun than working all night.

11. The general tried to get his troops to retreat before being surrounded, a strategy that ultimately failed.

Such abstract noun constructions are preferred on the test ... almost always correct.
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