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17 results for "Maria Reiche"
M_2_02 — Nazca Lines — Purpose, Astronomy, Water Rituals, and Modern AI Discovery
The Nazca Lines are a collection of over 1,500 geoglyphs etched into the arid Nazca Plateau of southern Peru, created primarily between 500 BCE and 500 CE by the Nazca culture. They range from simple geometric lines exte
W_4_03 — Andean Civilizations — Chavín, Nazca, Tiwanaku, Caral
The Andean region produced one of the world's great independent civilizations — arguably the most underappreciated. From Caral (~3000 BCE, contemporary with Egyptian pyramids and Sumerian Ur) to the Inca (conquered by Sp
ZH_3_05 — Nazca Lines: Astronomical and Ecological Hypotheses
The Nazca Lines are a vast complex of geoglyphs — ground drawings created by removing the dark, iron-oxide-coated desert pavement to reveal the lighter ground beneath — spread across the arid Pampa de Nazca and surroundi
ZF_2_22 — Hadal Zone & Deep-Sea Trench Ecology
The hadal zone — the deepest region of the ocean, comprising trenches and troughs exceeding 6,000 meters — represents Earth's last great frontier of biological exploration. Named after Hades, the Greek underworld, the ha
ZF_2_01 — Deep-Sea Ecosystems: Hydrothermal Vents and Abyssal Biology
The deep ocean — defined as waters below 200 m, encompassing 95% of the ocean's volume and Earth's largest biome — remained virtually unexplored until the mid-20th century. The 1977 discovery of hydrothermal vent ecosyst
ZF_3_12 — Submarines, Submersibles, and the History of Ocean Exploration
The history of ocean exploration technology spans from the earliest diving bells (Alexander the Great's legendary glass barrel, ~332 BCE; Halley's practical diving bell, 1690) to full-ocean-depth human-occupied vehicles
ZF_4_18 — Deep Ocean Microplastics
Deep ocean microplastics — synthetic polymer particles smaller than 5 mm that have infiltrated the deepest marine environments on Earth — represent one of the most alarming and poorly understood dimensions of global plas
ZF_1_17 — Abyssal Trench Biogeography
Hadal trenches — oceanic depressions exceeding 6,000 m depth, formed by tectonic subduction — represent Earth's deepest and least explored biomes, harboring unique ecosystems under extreme pressures (600–1,100 atm), perp
ZF_1_03 — Seafloor Spreading, Plate Tectonics and Marine Geology
The discovery that the ocean floor is not ancient and static but young, dynamic, and continuously recycled revolutionized Earth science in the 20th century. Seafloor spreading — proposed by Harry Hess (1962) and confirme
ZF_1_07 — Submarine Geology and Ocean Trenches
The submarine geology of the ocean floor encompasses a vast range of geological features — from abyssal plains (the flattest surfaces on Earth, at 3,000–6,000 m depth, covered by fine sediment) to mid-ocean ridges (the l
ZG_2_06 — Historical Linguistics and Language Family Classification
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, how they are related to each other, and how they can be grouped into language families descended from common ancestors. The discipline's c
ZG_3_17 — Historical Linguistics Methodology
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, the genealogical classification of languages into families, and the reconstruction of unattested ancestral languages through systematic co
O_3_20 — Microplastics, Nanoplastics, and the Ubiquitous Contamination Crisis
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter, with nanoplastics defined as smaller than 1 μm — have become the most pervasive anthropogenic contaminant on Earth. Since mass production of synthetic poly
O_5_19 — Pacific Ocean Anomalies: Ring of Fire, Deep-Sea Mysteries, and Tectonic Frontiers
The Pacific Ocean — Earth's largest and deepest body of water — concentrates a disproportionate share of geological anomalies. The Ring of Fire encircles it with 75% of the world's active volcanoes and 90% of earthquakes
R_4_14 — Evolution of Hearing: From Vibration Sensing to Complex Auditory Systems
The evolution of hearing — the ability to detect pressure waves propagating through air, water, or solid substrates — represents one of the most remarkable transformations in vertebrate history. The story begins with anc
R_5_12 — Deep-Sea Biology: Hadal Zone Life, Pressure, and Extreme Organisms
The deep sea — defined as depths below 200 meters (the photic zone boundary) — constitutes the largest habitat on Earth by volume, yet remains among the least explored. This vast realm is divided into depth zones: the me
S_3_10 — Ocean Technology and Deep-Sea Exploration
The deep ocean remains Earth's most underexplored frontier — less than 25% of the ocean floor has been mapped at high resolution (>100 m), and only a tiny fraction has been directly observed or sampled. Human-occupied ve
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