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23 results for "SNO" — page 1 of 2
E_2_11 — Snowball Earth Hypothesis
The Snowball Earth hypothesis proposes that Earth's surface was entirely or nearly entirely covered by ice on at least two occasions during the Neoproterozoic era (c. 720–635 million years ago): the Sturtian glaciation (
A_4_02 — The Norse Eddas: Cosmology, Ragnarök, and the World Tree
The Norse Eddas — the Poetic Edda (anonymous, compiled ~1270 CE from older oral sources) and the Prose Edda (written ~1220 CE by Snorri Sturluson) — preserve the most complete surviving mythology of the pre-Christian Ger
X_4_09 — Public Health and Sanitation
Public health and sanitation — organized efforts to prevent disease, promote health, and prolong life through collective action — have arguably saved more lives than all other medical interventions combined. Clean water,
X_3_03 — Epidemic and Pandemic History
Epidemics and pandemics — the outbreak and widespread transmission of infectious disease — have shaped human civilization as profoundly as wars, technologies, and ideas. Ancient: the Plague of Athens (430 BCE, described
X_3_12 — History of Epidemiology: From Miasma to Molecular Surveillance
Epidemiology — the study of the distribution and determinants of disease in populations — is the foundational science of public health, responsible for identifying disease causes, informing prevention strategies, and gui
ZF_4_16 — Microplastics in the Ocean: Sources, Pathways, and Ecological Impact
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean. First systematically described as a marine pollutant by Richard Thomp
ZG_3_01 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis — Does Language Shape Thought?
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — more precisely, the principle of linguistic relativity — proposes that the structure of a language influences or determines the habitual thought patterns, perception, and worldview of its spe
J_4_08 — Ancient Refrigeration and Ice Storage — Yakhchāl to Ice Houses
The ability to preserve cold — to store ice, cool water, and refrigerate food — was achieved by ancient civilizations through ingenious engineering solutions that exploited evaporative cooling, radiative cooling, thermal
J_4_15 — Inuit Engineering & Arctic Technology
Inuit engineering represents one of humanity's most remarkable technological adaptations to extreme environmental conditions — Arctic and Subarctic peoples (including Inuit, Yupik, and Iñupiat groups across northern Cana
Q_4_04 — Neutrino Astronomy and Neutrino Mass
Neutrinos — nearly massless, electrically neutral leptons that interact only via the weak nuclear force and gravity — are among the most abundant particles in the universe (~330/cm³ relic neutrinos from the Big Bang) yet
Q_4_29 — Neutrino Mass and Oscillation Discovery
The discovery that neutrinos have mass — confirmed through the observation of neutrino oscillations — ranks among the most important developments in particle physics since the establishment of the Standard Model, because
Q_3_08 — Planetary Formation and Protoplanetary Disks
Planets form within protoplanetary disks — rotationally supported structures of gas and dust orbiting newly formed stars, with typical masses of 0.1–10% of the stellar mass, radii of 10–1000 AU, and lifetimes of ~1–10 mi
D_5_06 — Fractals and Scale Invariance
Fractals — shapes and patterns that repeat at every scale of magnification — were formalized by Benoît Mandelbrot in The Fractal Geometry of Nature (1982) as a new mathematical language for describing the IRREGULAR forms
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
ZE_5_06 — Ethics of Whistleblowing: Loyalty, Truth, and Institutional Accountability
Whistleblowing — the disclosure by a member of an organization of illegal, unethical, or harmful activities to parties capable of taking corrective action — forces a direct confrontation between competing moral obligatio
ZE_3_04 — Ethics of Technology and Surveillance
Surveillance ethics addresses the moral implications of monitoring individuals and populations through technological means and the tension between security and privacy. The field draws on a long philosophical lineage — J
R_1_02 — The Cambrian Explosion
Between ~541 and ~520 million years ago, nearly ALL major animal body plans (phyla) appeared in the fossil record in an evolutionary "instant" — roughly 20 million years. Before this, life had been single-celled for ~3 b
R_1_09 — The Great Oxidation Event: Oxygen, Cyanobacteria, and Earth's Atmospheric Transformation
The Great Oxidation Event (GOE), occurring approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago during the Paleoproterozoic, was the most dramatic chemical transformation in Earth's history — atmospheric oxygen rose from trace levels
S_5_02 — Surveillance Technology — Panopticism, Mass Surveillance, and the Architecture of Control
Surveillance technology has evolved from Bentham's architectural Panopticon concept (1787) through the analog era of telephone wiretapping and photographic surveillance to the digital panopticon of the 21st century — whe
ZA_3_05 — Neutrino Physics: Oscillations, Mass, and the Ghost Particle
Neutrinos are the lightest known massive particles, interacting only via the weak force and gravity. Three flavors exist — electron, muon, and tau — and they can transform between flavors as they propagate (neutrino osci
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