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133 results for "natural selection" — page 1 of 7
L_4_09 — Selective Sweeps and Positive Selection in Humans
A selective sweep occurs when a beneficial allele rises rapidly in frequency under positive natural selection, carrying nearby linked variants along with it (genetic hitchhiking) and reducing genetic variation across the
L_3_12 — Genetics of Pigmentation: Skin, Hair, and Eye Color Evolution
Human pigmentation — the variation in skin, hair, and eye color across populations — is one of the most visible and best-understood examples of natural selection in our species. Pigmentation is determined primarily by th
L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other
P_2_13 — Philosophy of Biology: Teleology, Species Concepts, and Function
The philosophy of biology examines the conceptual foundations, explanatory structures, and ontological commitments of the biological sciences — asking questions that biology itself presupposes but does not typically addr
R_2_11 — Convergent Evolution: Parallel Solutions Across Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent origin of similar features in unrelated lineages — is one of the most striking patterns in the history of life, suggesting that natural selection repeatedly discovers the same "solu
O_4_09 — Singing Sands, Booming Dunes, and Anomalous Desert Acoustics
Singing sands and booming dunes are natural acoustic phenomena in which sand produces audible sound — sometimes at extraordinary volume (up to 105 dB, comparable to a chainsaw at 1 m) — when disturbed by wind, avalanchin
M_1_11 — Baigong Pipes: Natural Formation or Anomalous Technology?
The Baigong pipes (also called the "Baigong alien ruins") are a collection of pipe-like iron-rich structures found in and around three caves on Mount Baigong (also transliterated Bai Gong Shan), near Delingha in the remo
Z_2_07 — Genetics of Disease Resistance
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force shaping the human genome, leaving signatures across thousands of loci. The best-understood example is sickle cell disease (HbS, Glu6Val in HBB): heterozygous
O_4_07 — Natural Nuclear Reactors Oklo
The Oklo natural nuclear reactors are the only known locations where self-sustaining nuclear fission chain reactions occurred naturally — discovered in 1972 in the Oklo and Okélobondo uranium mines, Haut-Ogooué Province,
B_4_12 — Tengu, Oni, and Japanese Supernatural Taxonomy
Japanese tradition preserves one of the world's most elaborate and systematized supernatural taxonomies — a vast ecosystem of non-human beings encompassing kami (gods/spirits), yōkai (strange beings), yūrei (ghosts), oni
B_3_16 — Yokai: Japanese Supernatural Taxonomy
Yokai (妖怪) constitute Japan's vast and systematized taxonomy of supernatural beings — a classification system unrivaled in scope by any other world mythology. Encompassing shape-shifting obake, vengeful yurei ghosts, mis
L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe
L_2_02 — Population Genetics and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Population genetics — the mathematical study of allele frequency change in populations — provides the quantitative framework underlying evolutionary biology. The Hardy-Weinberg principle (1908), independently derived by
H_4_16 — Pharmaceutical Suppression of Natural Remedies
The claim that the pharmaceutical industry systematically suppresses natural and herbal remedies to protect its patent-based profit model is one of the most widespread beliefs in alternative medicine — and one that conta
P_5_20 — Cicero: Roman Oratory, Natural Law, and Republican Philosophy
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) — Roman statesman, orator, philosopher, and lawyer — stands as one of the most influential figures in Western intellectual history, bridging Greek philosophy and Roman practice, and tra
P_2_16 — Philosophy of Law: Natural Law, Legal Positivism, and the Foundations of Justice
The philosophy of law (jurisprudence) addresses the fundamental questions: What is law? What is the relationship between law and morality? What makes a legal system legitimate? and how should judges decide difficult case
R_3_11 — Microevolution and Rapid Adaptation
Microevolution — changes in allele frequencies within populations over generations — is the fundamental engine of biological adaptation. Once assumed to operate too slowly to observe directly, research over the past 50 y
R_2_14 — Recent Human Evolution: Lactase Persistence, Altitude Adaptation, and Malaria Resistance
Human evolution did not stop with the emergence of Homo sapiens ~300,000 years ago — natural selection has continued to shape human biology in response to agriculture, diet, disease, climate, and altitude, producing some
R_1_12 — History of Evolutionary Theory
Evolutionary theory — the unifying framework of modern biology — has itself undergone a remarkable evolution over more than two centuries. Pre-Darwinian ideas included Lamarck's transformism (1809), which proposed that o
M_2_03 — Yonaguni Monument — Natural or Man-Made?
The Yonaguni Monument is a massive underwater rock formation located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, Japan's westernmost point in the Ryukyu archipelago.
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