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321 results for "Costa Rica" — page 10 of 17
O_1_14 — Sprites, Elves, and Blue Jets: Upper Atmosphere Transient Luminous Events
Transient Luminous Events (TLEs) are a family of large-scale optical and electrical phenomena occurring in the upper atmosphere (stratosphere, mesosphere, and lower ionosphere, ~20-100 km altitude) above active thunderst
O_1_13 — South Atlantic Anomaly: Geomagnetic Weakness and Radiation Belt Gap
The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is the largest known weakness in Earth's magnetic field, centered over South America and the South Atlantic Ocean (roughly between Brazil and southern Africa), where the inner Van Allen r
O_4_05 — Desertification, Green Sahara & Landscape Transformation
Between approximately 11,000 and 5,000 years BP, the Sahara — today the world's largest hot desert — was a green, well-watered landscape of lakes, rivers, and grasslands supporting hippopotami, crocodiles, fish, and larg
T_2_21 — Collective Trauma Psychology
Collective trauma refers to the psychological impact of traumatic events experienced by entire communities, populations, or cultural groups — events such as genocide, slavery, colonialism, war, natural disasters, and pan
T_2_05 — Clinical Psychology: History and Foundations
Clinical psychology — the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of mental disorders — evolved from ancient supernatural explanations of madness through institutional reform, the psychoanalytic revolution, behavioral and c
T_1_08 — Personality Psychology and the Big Five
Personality psychology seeks to understand individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving — and why these patterns remain relatively stable across time and situations.
D_1_07 — Teotihuacan — City of the Gods
Teotihuacan — the name itself meaning "the place where gods were born" in Nahuatl, given by the Aztecs who found the city already in ruins — was one of the largest cities in the ancient world, reaching a peak population
D_5_13 — Obsidian: Volcanic Glass in Technology, Trade, and Ritual
Obsidian — a naturally occurring volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly with insufficient crystal growth — is one of the most important materials in human technological and cultural history. Prized for its
D_3_21 — Cahokia: America's Forgotten Metropolis
Cahokia — located in the Mississippi River floodplain near present-day Collinsville, Illinois, approximately 13 km east of St. Louis, Missouri — was the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico and the center of
D_3_17 — Sanchi Stupa and Buddhist Monumental Architecture
Sanchi — a hilltop complex near the town of Sanchi Nagar in Madhya Pradesh, central India — is the finest surviving ensemble of early Buddhist monumental architecture and one of the most important Buddhist pilgrimage and
B_5_12 — Cognitive Science of Monster Concepts: Why Humans Invent Creatures
Why do all human cultures independently generate remarkably similar monster concepts — predatory hybrids, shape-shifters, reanimated corpses, giant serpents, invisible watchers? Cognitive science offers a compelling fram
B_5_15 — Popol Vuh: K'iche' Maya Creation Narrative and Supernatural Beings
The Popol Vuh is the principal mythological and cosmogonic text of the K'iche' Maya, preserved in a colonial-era transcription completed around 1554–1558 CE and first recorded in Latin script by Francisco Ximénez circa 1
B_1_12 — Wind and Storm Entities: Vayu, Fujin, Ehecatl, Boreas, Rudra
Wind and storm entities — deities, spirits, and supernatural forces governing atmospheric phenomena — occupy a uniquely powerful position in world mythologies: they are invisible yet physically felt, destructive yet life
B_3_10 — World Tree Guardians and Cosmic Serpents
The World Tree — a colossal tree (or pillar, mountain, or vine) connecting the layers of the cosmos (typically underworld, earth, and heavens) — is one of the most widespread cosmological concepts in human mythology, app
B_3_09 — Dragon Typology — Cross-Cultural Serpent-Dragon Traditions
Dragons and giant serpents appear in nearly every major mythological tradition worldwide — European fire-breathing dragons, Chinese lóng (beneficent celestial beings), Mesoamerican feathered serpents, Australian Aborigin
L_1_06 — Human Migration Synthesis — DNA, Language, and Culture
The synthesis of genetic, linguistic, and archaeological evidence has transformed understanding of human migration over the past three decades.
L_1_04 — Archaic Human Species Synthesis
The human evolutionary tree is far more complex than the older linear model suggested. Fossils, ancient DNA, and proteomics now show that Homo sapiens overlapped with several other hominin lineages, including Neanderthal
L_1_09 — Ghost Populations & Missing Archaic Lineages
Ghost populations are human groups whose existence is inferred from statistical signatures in modern or ancient genomes rather than from direct fossil or archaeological evidence. The term reflects a central challenge of
L_1_14 — Homo Erectus: The Most Successful Human Species
Homo erectus (including regional variants sometimes classified as H. ergaster, H. georgicus, H. soloensis, and H. pekinensis) is arguably the most successful hominin species in evolutionary history — persisting for nearl
L_1_03 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam & Population Origins
Mitochondrial Eve and Y-chromosomal Adam are the most recent common ancestors of all living humans along strictly maternal and strictly paternal lines. They were not the first woman and man, were not a couple, and do not
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