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Real-Life Decision Making

Limnologists usually make decisions based on strong science. They often work in teams with other naturalists to verify and confirm their ideas. But sometimes they have to choose based on their gut instincts.

You are a limnologist leading a research excursion into the highest altitudes of the Rocky Mountains. Your trip lasts two weeks. During that time, you collect more than 2,000 water samples from high-altitude lakes.

You are attempting to measure the impact of pollution from distant cities on these environments.

You have taken samples from every one of 200 lakes shown on a map. But as you begin to pack up camp and hike back down the mountain, one of your researchers notices a lake on a distant peak. You take out your portable telescope and find that, indeed, it is a lake not shown on the map.

Hiking to the lake will add two days to your trip. Yet the fact that the lake is not shown on maps indicates it may be virtually untouched by humans. It could offer the most accurate readings.

What do you do?

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