All living things ingest the element carbon in the form of its isotope carbon 14 (14C), which floats freely in the atmosphere and is present in all foods. When a life form stops ingesting 14C (when it, you know, dies), no new 14C enters the body, and the 14C in the body begins to radioactively decay into 14N (nitrogen isotope 14). Importantly, 14C decays into 14N at a known and pretty stable rate: After about 5,600 years, only half of the original 14C remains because the rest has decayed into 14N.According to the passage, scientists can observe radioactive decay to determine

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Paragraph (Reading) Comprehension sections in any exam wants to test whether you can understand what you've read so you can implement it or pass it on to others. To do well on Paragraph Comprehension, you need to have strong reading comprehension skills. You also have to be able to draw your own conclusions from what you've read. In the ASVAB exams, you'll have 22 minutes to answer 11 Paragraph Comprehension questions on the computerized ASVAB or 13 minutes to answer 15 questions on the paper version.  The questions on the Paragraph Comprehension tests ask you to: Find specific... Show more

All living things ingest the element carbon in the form of its isotope carbon 14 (14C), which floats freely in the atmosphere and is present in all foods. When a life form stops ingesting 14C (when it, you know, dies), no new 14C enters the body, and the 14C in the body begins to radioactively decay into 14N (nitrogen isotope 14). Importantly, 14C decays into 14N at a known and pretty stable rate: After about 5,600 years, only half of the original 14C remains because the rest has decayed into 14N.<br>According to the passage, scientists can observe radioactive decay to determine






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