Diagnostic Test 10 Practice Test
•117 QuestionsHistorian Laleh Omrani contends that an early transdesert trade corridor emerged primarily to satisfy demand for medicinal resins—frankincense and myrrh—rather than for luxury textiles. She argues that caravans initially formed to connect resin-producing hinterlands with distant urban markets that prized these substances for ritual and pharmacological uses. Only later, she says, did textiles become prominent as the route diversified its cargo. Skeptics maintain that textiles, with their high value-to-weight ratio, would have been the most profitable catalyst from the outset. Omrani replies that profitability is not the only driver; stable demand for resins could have provided the reliable baseline needed to establish the route. To evaluate her claim, evidence about what commodities dominated the earliest long-distance traffic and generated the most revenue is needed.
Which finding, if true, would most directly weaken the scholar's claim?
Historian Laleh Omrani contends that an early transdesert trade corridor emerged primarily to satisfy demand for medicinal resins—frankincense and myrrh—rather than for luxury textiles. She argues that caravans initially formed to connect resin-producing hinterlands with distant urban markets that prized these substances for ritual and pharmacological uses. Only later, she says, did textiles become prominent as the route diversified its cargo. Skeptics maintain that textiles, with their high value-to-weight ratio, would have been the most profitable catalyst from the outset. Omrani replies that profitability is not the only driver; stable demand for resins could have provided the reliable baseline needed to establish the route. To evaluate her claim, evidence about what commodities dominated the earliest long-distance traffic and generated the most revenue is needed.
Which finding, if true, would most directly weaken the scholar's claim?