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400 results for "Diquís culture" — page 2 of 20
L_3_03 — Lactase Persistence and Gene-Culture Coevolution
Lactase persistence — the ability of adults to digest the milk sugar lactose — is the most thoroughly documented case of gene-culture coevolution in the human species. The ancestral mammalian condition is lactase non-per
ZE_3_11 — Food Ethics — Agriculture, Animal Use, and Sacred Dietary Laws
Food ethics examines the moral dimensions of what we eat and how we produce it — spanning agricultural systems, animal use, sacred dietary laws, environmental impact, and distributive justice. Industrial animal agricultu
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_3_09 — Vertical Farming and Controlled Environment Agriculture
Vertical farming grows crops in stacked layers inside controlled indoor environments, typically using hydroponics (nutrient-rich water without soil), aeroponics (misting roots with nutrient solution), or aquaponics (inte
S_5_16 — Vertical Farming: Controlled Environment Agriculture and Urban Food Systems
Vertical farming — the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers within controlled indoor environments, using artificial lighting, hydroponic or aeroponic nutrient delivery, and precisely managed climate par
S_2_09 — Cellular Agriculture: Lab-Grown Meat, Fermentation, and Post-Animal Food
Cellular agriculture — the production of animal products (meat, dairy, leather, eggs) directly from cell cultures rather than from whole animals — represents a potentially transformative approach to global food productio
F_4_06 — Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe
This document examines Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include Europe Before the Steppe Migrations, The Indo-European Expansio
M_5_17 — Natufian Culture: Proto-Agriculture, Sedentism, and the Neolithic Transition
The Natufian culture (ca. 14,500–11,600 years ago) was an Epipalaeolithic archaeological culture of the Levant — spanning modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria — that represents the earliest known transiti
A_1_24 — Natufian Culture
The Natufian culture (c. 15,000–11,500 BP) represents the critical transitional period between mobile hunter-gatherer lifeways and settled agricultural communities in the Levant. First defined by Dorothy Garrod in 1928 f
W_4_17 — Mississippian Culture and Mound-Builder Networks
The Mississippian culture (c. 800–1600 CE) was the most complex pre-Columbian society in North America east of the Mississippi River, characterized by flat-topped platform mounds, intensive maize agriculture, hierarchica
W_3_07 — San (Bushmen) Rock Art, Trance Dance, and the Oldest Living Culture
The San (Bushmen) of southern Africa represent what may be the oldest continuously surviving cultural tradition on Earth, with genetic evidence placing them at the base of the modern human family tree (mitochondrial DNA
W_3_24 — Nok Culture
The Nok culture (c. 1500 BCE – 500 CE) of central Nigeria produced sub-Saharan Africa's earliest-known large-scale terracotta sculpture tradition and some of the continent's earliest evidence for iron smelting. First ide
W_5_15 — Aboriginal Australian Civilizations: 65,000 Years of Continuous Culture
Aboriginal Australians represent the oldest continuous cultural tradition in the world — with archaeological evidence of human occupation of the Australian continent dating back at least 65,000 years (Madjedbebe rock she
ZF_5_04 — Aquaculture: Fish Farming, Mariculture, and Blue Revolution
Aquaculture — the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and seaweed — has become the fastest-growing food production sector in the world and now provides more seafood for human consumption
ZG_4_02 — Sign Language — Gestural Communication and Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages that use the visual-gestural modality — hands, face, body, and spatial relationships — instead of the auditory-vocal channel to express the same range of linguistic co
ZC_5_13 — Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture, and Sapir-Whorf
Linguistic anthropology — one of the four traditional subfields of American anthropology (alongside cultural, biological/physical, and archaeological anthropology) — studies the relationships between language and social
B_4_08 — Trickster Figures Across Cultures
The Trickster — a being who violates rules, transgresses boundaries, subverts authority, and through cunning, deception, and apparent chaos paradoxically creates, transforms, or renews the world — appears across virtuall
B_1_21 — Culture Hero Archetype: Prometheus, Maui, Quetzalcoatl, and the Global Gift of Knowledge
The culture hero is one of the most persistent character types in world mythology — a figure (divine, semi-divine, or human) who obtains crucial knowledge, skills, or resources for humanity, often through theft from the
H_3_09 — Suppression of Matriarchal Evidence and Goddess Cultures
The question of whether matriarchal or goddess-centered societies existed in prehistory — and whether evidence for them has been systematically suppressed or marginalized — is one of the most contentious intersections of
F_4_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
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