1 |
The main idea of the passage is that |
A. |
Migration over land requires a simpler explanation than migration over water does |
B. |
The means by which animals migrate over water are complex and only partly understood |
C. |
The ability of migrant animals to keep track of time is related to their magnetic sense |
D. |
Knowledge of geographic location is essential to migrants with little or no compass sense |
E. |
Explanations of how animals migrate tend to replace, rather than build on, one another |
2 |
It can be inferred from the passage that if the flock of birds described in lines 8-12 were navigating by compass sense alone, they would, after the storm, fly |
A. |
East |
B. |
North |
C. |
Northwest |
D. |
South |
E. |
Southeast |
3 |
In maintaining that migrating animals would need "a fantastic map sense" (line 17) to determine their geographic position by celestial navigation, the author intends to express |
A. |
Admiration for the ability of the migrants |
B. |
Skepticism about celestial navigation as an explanation |
C. |
Certainly that the phenomenon of migration will remain mysterious |
D. |
Interest in a new method of accounting for over-water migration |
E. |
Surprise that animals apparently navigate in much the same way that human beings do |
4 |
Of the following descriptions of migrating animals, which most strongly suggests that the animals are depending on magnetic cues to orient themselves? |
A. |
Pigeons can properly readjust their course even when flying long distances through exceedingly dense fogs. |
B. |
Bison are able to reach their destination by passing through a landscape that has been partially altered by a recent fire. |
C. |
Elephants are able to find grounds that some members of the herd have never seen before. |
D. |
Swallows are able to return to a given spot at the same time every year. |
E. |
Monarch butterflies coming from different parts of North America are able to arrive at the same location each winter. |