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83 results for "submerged landscape" — page 1 of 5
ZF_3_08 — Sunda Shelf and Southeast Asian Submerged Landscapes
The Sunda Shelf (or Sundaland) is one of Earth's largest continental shelves — an area of ~1.8 million km² (larger than the Indian subcontinent) that connects the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and Bali to peninsular
F_4_25 — Doggerland: Europe's Submerged Landscape
Doggerland is the name given to the now-submerged landmass that once connected Britain to continental Europe across what is now the southern North Sea. During the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,500–19,000 years ago), when sea
ZF_3_16 — Underwater Cultural Heritage: Submerged Archaeology and Maritime History
Underwater cultural heritage encompasses the vast archaeological record preserved beneath the world's oceans, seas, rivers, and lakes — estimated to include over 3 million shipwrecks worldwide, along with submerged settl
ZF_1_13 — Continental Shelves: Submerged Geography and Ice Age Coastlines
Continental shelves — the shallow, gently sloping underwater extensions of continental landmasses — represent some of the most biologically productive, economically valuable, and archaeologically significant terrain on E
M_5_23 — Post-Glacial Flooding and Submerged Archaeological Landscapes
Between the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, c. 26,500–19,000 years ago) and approximately 6,000 years ago, global mean sea level rose by approximately 120–130 m, drowning continental shelves that had been habitable land. The
M_5_04 — Submerged Structures of the Mediterranean — Pavlopetri to Baiae
The Mediterranean Sea contains some of the world's best-documented and most archaeologically significant submerged settlements and structures — sites that were built on dry land and subsequently inundated by combinations
U_2_11 — Landscape Painting: Shanshui, Hudson River, and the Natural Sublime
Landscape painting — the artistic representation of natural scenery — is among the most culturally revealing genres in the history of art, because the way a culture depicts nature reveals its deepest assumptions about th
ZF_3_01 — Sea-Level History: Glacial Cycles, Meltwater Pulses, and Coastal Archaeology
Sea level has varied by over 120 meters between glacial and interglacial periods, repeatedly reshaping coastlines, exposing and flooding continental shelves, and creating or destroying land bridges that directed human mi
E_3_15 — Sea-Level Curves: Eustatic Change from LGM to Present
Sea-level curves — graphical reconstructions of how global mean sea level has changed through time — represent one of the most important datasets in Quaternary science, recording the waxing and waning of continental ice
E_3_04 — Doggerland and Sundaland — Drowned Continental Shelves
Doggerland and Sundaland represent two of the most significant landmasses lost to post-glacial sea level rise, together encompassing hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of habitable terrain that was progressively
Q_4_08 — String Theory: Landscape, Extra Dimensions, and M-Theory
String theory is the leading candidate for a unified theory of all fundamental forces and particles — a framework in which the fundamental entities are not point particles but tiny, one-dimensional vibrating strings (ope
ZB_4_12 — Landscape Ecology: Patches, Corridors, and Mosaics
Landscape ecology studies how spatial patterns of ecosystems — the arrangement, size, shape, and connectivity of habitat patches within a heterogeneous landscape mosaic — influence ecological processes including species
G_1_11 — Underwater Remote Sensing — Multibeam, Magnetometry, Sub-Bottom Profiling
Underwater remote sensing encompasses a suite of geophysical survey technologies — multibeam echosounder (MBES), side-scan sonar (SSS), magnetometry, and sub-bottom profiler (SBP) — that enable archaeologists, oceanograp
G_2_06 — Landscape Archaeology and Spatial Analysis
Landscape archaeology — the study of how past peoples shaped, inhabited, and understood their physical environments at scales beyond the individual site — has evolved from early settlement-pattern surveys into a sophisti
O_1_17 — Ley Lines: Scientific Investigation of Alleged Landscape Alignments
Ley lines — the hypothesis that significant ancient sites (megalithic monuments, churches, hillforts, springs, crossroads) are aligned along straight lines across the landscape — originated with Alfred Watkins (1855–1935
D_4_10 — Yonaguni Formation: Japan's Submerged Stone Controversy
The Yonaguni Formation (also called the "Yonaguni Monument" or "Yonaguni Submarine Ruins") is a submerged rock structure located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, the westernmost of Japan's Ryukyu Islands (24°26
M_5_21 — Maritime Archaeology & Submerged Ancient Sites
Maritime archaeology — the study of human interaction with the sea through material remains — has revealed that the ocean floor and coastal shelves hold some of the most significant and best-preserved evidence of ancient
M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes
This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo
U_5_20 — Sacred Geography: Landscape, Pilgrimage, and Ritual Space
Sacred geography is the study of how human cultures invest physical landscapes with spiritual, cosmological, and mythological significance — transforming terrain into hierophanic space where the divine intersects the mat
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
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