Read the text below and decide which option best fits each gap:
Planetary Artistry
By Johanna Kieniewicz
For me, the highlight of this past week's science news was the images __________ back from the Curiosity rover, providing __________ geologic evidence that water flowed on Mars. Of course, this wasn't exactly a surprise; for decades, planetary scientists have suggested the channel networks visible in spacecraft imagery couldn't have been made by anything else. The evidence has been __________ as well, as various clay minerals and iron oxides have been identified through hyperspectral imagery.
Nonetheless, I suspect that the image of definitely water-lain __________ made the heart of more than one geologist __________ a beat. Ground truth. You could argue that the scientific exploration of the extra-terrestrial is, at least __________ part, a search for meaning: to position us within a larger cosmology. But our fascination with, and connection to, what we see in the night sky comes not just through science, but also through art. So it should come as no surprise that scientific images of planetary surfaces have __________ inspiration to a range of artists from Galileo - whose first sketches of the moon through a telescope are __________ beautiful - to Barbara Hepworth - whose interpretations of the lunar surface are far less literal. Source and full text: http://blogs.plos.org/attheinterface/2012/10/04/planetary-artistry/
The correct sequence is:
A) shot final swelling dross slip in offered totally
B) thrown proven expanding grounds lose in given doubtlessly
C) fired guaranteed increasing matter jump in made surely
D) thrown proven mounting grounds jump with given doubtlessly
E) beamed conclusive mounting sediments skip in provided truly