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47 results for "salt marsh" — page 1 of 3
ZF_2_06 — Mangrove and Estuary Ecosystems
Mangroves and estuaries are transitional ecosystems where terrestrial and marine environments meet, creating some of the most biologically productive and ecologically critical habitats on Earth. Estuaries — semi-enclosed
ZF_4_09 — Seagrass and Coastal Carbon Sequestration (Blue Carbon)
Blue carbon refers to the carbon captured and stored by coastal and marine ecosystems — primarily seagrass meadows, mangrove forests, and salt marshes — which sequester carbon at rates per unit area far exceeding terrest
ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree
F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity
Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,
F_4_30 — Salt: History, Preservation, and Global Trade Networks
Salt (sodium chloride) is arguably the most important mineral in human civilization — essential for life, critical for food preservation before refrigeration, and a driver of trade routes, taxation, and conflict across m
M_3_11 — Paleolithic Calendars: Marshack's Lunar Notation Hypothesis
In 1972, science journalist Alexander Marshack published The Roots of Civilization, arguing that series of marks engraved on Upper Paleolithic bone and antler artifacts — previously dismissed as random decorations or sim
F_2_07 — Salt Trade and Ancient Economies
Salt — sodium chloride (NaCl) — was arguably the most economically important commodity in the ancient and medieval world, rivaling gold and silver in its capacity to generate wealth, shape trade routes, and determine the
F_2_12 — Saharan Trade Routes: Gold, Salt, and Knowledge Across the Desert
The trans-Saharan trade routes — a network of caravan trails crossing the world's largest hot desert (~9 million km²) between the Mediterranean coast and sub-Saharan West Africa — were among the most important long-dista
E_5_03 — The End-Triassic Mass Extinction
The End-Triassic mass extinction (c. 201.564 ± 0.015 million years ago) was one of the "Big Five" mass extinctions in Earth's history, eliminating approximately 76% of all species and ~50% of genera, clearing the ecologi
M_2_13 — Nan Madol — Pacific Megalithic Mystery
Nan Madol — a complex of 92 artificial islets built on a coral reef flat off the southeastern shore of Pohnpei (Federated States of Micronesia) — is the only ancient city in the world built entirely on water, and one of
M_2_01 — Anomalous Megaliths: Nan Madol, Baalbek, and Unexplained Engineering
Several ancient megalithic sites worldwide exhibit engineering achievements that remain difficult to fully explain with our current understanding of the tools, techniques, and organizational capacity available to their b
M_2_15 — Gunung Padang: Indonesia's Controversial Megalithic Site
Gunung Padang is a terraced hilltop site in West Java, Indonesia, covered with thousands of columnar basalt blocks arranged across five terraces rising ~30 meters above the surrounding terrain. Long revered as a sacred S
A_1_09 — Tiamat — Primordial Chaos Dragon and Cosmic Creation
Tiamat (Akkadian: ti'āmat or tâmtu, "sea") is the primordial chaos deity in the Enuma Elish — the Babylonian creation epic (composed ~1100 BCE, though drawing on older traditions). Tiamat represents the primordial salt w
A_1_07 — Enuma Elish — The Babylonian Creation Epic
The Enuma Elish ("When on high…") is the Babylonian creation epic — a cosmogonic poem of approximately 1,100 lines inscribed on seven clay tablets, composed ca. 1100 BCE (though likely drawing on older traditions back to
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_1_03 — Harappan / Indus Valley Civilization — Mohenjo-daro, Undeciphered Script, and the Pashupati Seal
The Indus Valley / Harappan Civilization (c. 3300–1300 BCE, mature phase 2600–1900 BCE) was the largest of the three great Bronze Age civilizations — at its peak covering ~1.25 million km², with an estimated population o
W_3_20 — Mali Empire and Timbuktu: West African Scholarly and Trade Power
The Mali Empire (Manden Kurufaba, ~1235–1600 CE) — one of the largest and wealthiest states in pre-modern world history — dominated the West African Sahel and savanna, controlling trans-Saharan trade routes and the gold-
W_5_31 — Muisca Confederation and El Dorado
The Muisca (also called Chibcha) confederation occupied the high-altitude plateaus of the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia (2,600 m elevation, modern Boyacá and Cundinamarca departments) and represents one of the most comp
ZH_3_07 — Celestial Navigation in the Pacific: Micronesian Stick Charts
The peoples of Micronesia — particularly the Marshall Islands and the Caroline Islands — developed some of the most sophisticated non-instrument navigation systems in human history. While Polynesian navigation (covered i
C_3_06 — Alchemy — Transmutation Across Cultures
Alchemy — from Arabic al-kīmiyā (possibly from Egyptian kmt, "black land," or Greek chymeia, "pouring/mixing") — is arguably the most misunderstood tradition in intellectual history. Dismissed by modern science as mere p
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