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480 results for "rotating ice" — page 17 of 24
N_5_10 — Intelligence Agencies and Occult Interest: Documented Cases
The intersection of intelligence agencies and occult or paranormal phenomena is one of the most extensively documented — yet still controversial — chapters in 20th-century intelligence history. Declassified documents (pr
R_4_10 — Cetacean Evolution: Whales, Dolphins, and the Return to the Sea
The evolution of cetaceans — whales, dolphins, and porpoises — from small, four-legged terrestrial mammals to the largest animals ever to live on Earth is one of the best-documented major evolutionary transitions, suppor
R_4_12 — Mimicry: Batesian, Müllerian, and Aggressive Deception
Mimicry — the resemblance of one organism (the mimic) to another (the model) or to an environmental feature, evolved to deceive a third party (the signal receiver, typically a predator) — is one of the most elegant demon
R_3_12 — Evolution of Sex and Reproduction
Sex — the rearrangement of genetic material from two parents to produce genetically unique offspring — is one of the most fundamental yet puzzling features of life. Sexual reproduction involves enormous costs: the "twofo
R_5_03 — Domestication of Plants and Agriculture
The domestication of plants — one of the most transformative events in human history — began independently in at least 10 geographic centers between ~12,000 and 5,000 years ago. The Fertile Crescent (wheat, barley, lenti
S_4_03 — Nuclear War and Civilizational Risk
Nuclear war remains one of the most acute existential threats to human civilization, with approximately 12,500 warheads in global arsenals as of 2024 and the Doomsday Clock at a historic 90 seconds to midnight. Peer-revi
S_4_01 — Existential Risk Taxonomy
Existential risk (x-risk) refers to any event that could permanently curtail humanity's long-term potential — including extinction, civilizational collapse without recovery, or irreversible loss of value (e.g., permanent
S_4_16 — Asteroid Mining & Space Resource Extraction
Asteroid mining — the extraction of mineral resources, water, and volatiles from near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) and main-belt asteroids — represents a theoretically transformative but technically undemonstrated space indust
S_1_09 — Quantum Cryptography and Post-Quantum Security
Quantum cryptography and post-quantum cryptography address the existential threat that quantum computers pose to current encryption. The threat: large-scale quantum computers running Shor's algorithm (Peter Shor, 1994) c
S_3_05 — Food Security, Agricultural Technology, and the Future of Feeding Humanity
Human civilization feeds 8+ billion people through an agricultural system built on the Green Revolution's high-yield crop varieties, synthetic fertilizers, and mechanization — achieving what Malthusian pessimists of the
S_3_01 — Climate Change, Civilization, and Deep-Time Context
Earth's climate has always changed — but the current rate and mechanism are unprecedented in geological history. This document places the modern climate crisis within the deep-time context that the corpus demands: from t
S_2_03 — Bioethics of Human Enhancement
Should humans enhance themselves beyond the boundaries of nature? This is the central question of enhancement bioethics — a field at the intersection of philosophy, medicine, law, genetics, neuroscience, and disability s
F_1_22 — Peopling of the Americas: Routes & Chronology
The peopling of the Americas — when, how, and by whom the Western Hemisphere was first colonized by modern humans — is one of the most actively debated questions in archaeology, genetics, and paleoanthropology, with the
F_1_16 — Coastal Migration Hypothesis: Kelp Highway and Pacific Rim
The coastal migration hypothesis (also known as the "Kelp Highway" hypothesis) proposes that the initial human colonization of the Americas occurred not via the traditional ice-free corridor through the interior of North
F_1_19 — Irish Monks in America: The Brendan Voyage and Pre-Columbian North Atlantic Contacts
The hypothesis that Irish monks reached Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and possibly North America before the Norse has a foundation in medieval literary, place-name, and archaeological evidence, though the most ambitious cl
F_1_12 — Beringia: Land Bridge, Migration, and Lost Landscape
Beringia — the vast landmass that periodically connected northeastern Asia to northwestern North America across what is now the Bering Strait and the shallow Chukchi and Bering Seas — was one of the most consequential ge
F_1_07 — First Americans Debate — Clovis, Pre-Clovis, and Coastal Routes
The question of when and how humans first reached the Americas has been transformed in the 21st century by a series of discoveries that have demolished the long-reigning "Clovis-first" paradigm. For decades, the archaeol
F_2_02 — Silk Road Knowledge Exchange — Technology, Religion, and Cultural Transmission
The Silk Road — more accurately Silk Routes, a network of overland and maritime trade corridors connecting China, Central Asia, South Asia, Persia, Arabia, and the Mediterranean from roughly 130 BCE to 1453 CE — was the
F_4_03 — Ancient Maritime Technology and Naval Knowledge
The history of maritime technology reveals that ancient civilizations achieved levels of nautical engineering and navigational skill far exceeding common assumptions. Phoenician sailors may have circumnavigated Africa ~6
F_4_07 — Sundaland and the Eden East Hypothesis
Sundaland — the vast continental shelf of Southeast Asia that was exposed during Pleistocene low sea levels — represents one of the most significant lost landscapes in human prehistory. At the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,0
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