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684 results for "Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth" — page 2 of 35
ZH_2_17 — Islamic Golden Age Astronomy: Observation, Innovation, and the Preservation of Knowledge
Islamic astronomy — the astronomical tradition developed in the Islamic world from the 8th through the 15th centuries CE — represents one of the most productive and consequential scientific enterprises in human history,
ZH_2_01 — Chinese Astronomical Records: Supernovae, Comets, Guest Stars
China produced the longest continuous tradition of systematic astronomical observation in human history — spanning from the Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions (c. 1200 BCE) through the imperial astronomical bureaus o
ZH_1_21 — Dendera Zodiac
The Dendera Zodiac — a circular bas-relief approximately 2.5 meters in diameter carved on the ceiling of a chapel in the Temple of Hathor at Dendera, Egypt — is the most complete surviving depiction of the ancient sky fr
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZF_4_05 — Marine Pharmacology and Drug Discovery
Marine pharmacology explores the ocean's vast biodiversity as a source of bioactive compounds for drug development — a field that has yielded several approved drugs and thousands of promising leads since the pioneering w
E_5_07 — Post-Extinction Recovery Patterns: Adaptive Radiation After Mass Dying
Mass extinctions are not merely episodes of destruction — they fundamentally reshape the trajectory of life through the recovery dynamics that follow. Post-extinction recovery is typically slow (5–10 million years for fu
E_5_02 — The Ordovician-Silurian Mass Extinction
The Late Ordovician mass extinction (c. 445–444 million years ago, at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary) was the second-most severe extinction event in Earth's history in terms of percentage of species lost — approximatel
ZB_4_16 — Mangrove Ecosystems
Mangroves are a group of approximately 70 species of salt-tolerant trees and shrubs that occupy the intertidal zone of tropical and subtropical coastlines worldwide, forming dense tidal forests that rank among the most p
ZC_3_23 — Commons Governance — Ostrom
Elinor Ostrom (1933–2012), professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington, became the first woman to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2009) for her groundbreaking work demonstratin
G_1_09 — Provenance Analysis: Strontium, Lead, and Oxygen Isotope Sourcing
Isotopic provenance analysis has revolutionized archaeology by enabling researchers to determine where an artifact was made, where a person grew up, what they ate, and how far they traveled — all from the chemical signat
O_5_05 — Ice Ages and Milankovitch Cycles: Orbital Forcing of Climate
Ice ages — periods when massive continental ice sheets expand to cover large portions of Earth's surface — are among the most dramatic climate events in the planet's history. The Quaternary glaciation (beginning ~2.6 mil
T_2_02 — Neurodiversity — Cognitive Variation as Adaptive Spectrum
The neurodiversity paradigm, articulated by sociologist Judy Singer in 1998, frames neurological differences—including autism, ADHD, dyslexia, synesthesia, Tourette syndrome, and other developmental conditions—not as pat
D_1_19 — Poverty Point: Louisiana's Enigmatic Archaic Earthwork Complex
Poverty Point is a Late Archaic period (approximately 1700–1100 BCE) earthwork complex located near the town of Epps in West Carroll Parish, northeastern Louisiana, on the Macon Ridge overlooking the floodplain of Bayou
B_1_19 — Love and Beauty Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
Deities governing love, beauty, fertility, and sexuality appear across virtually every documented religious tradition, often combining erotic power with martial or funerary functions that modern Western categories would
ZD_1_13 — Kolmogorov Complexity and Algorithmic Information Theory
Kolmogorov complexity (also called algorithmic complexity, descriptive complexity, or program-size complexity) — the length of the shortest computer program (on a fixed universal Turing machine) that produces a given str
L_1_16 — Denisovan Genetics and Legacy
The Denisovans — an extinct group of archaic humans first identified in 2010 from ancient DNA extracted from a finger bone fragment found in Denisova Cave, Altai Mountains, Siberia (~41,000 years old) — represent one of
L_2_17 — Pacific Islander Genetics: Austronesian Ancestry, Denisovan Introgression, and Oceanian Genomics
Pacific Islander populations — spanning Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia — harbor some of the most genetically complex and scientifically informative genomes in human biology. Their genetic history records multiple d
L_3_17 — Endogenous Retroviruses (HERVs) in the Human Genome
Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) — remnants of ancient retroviral infections that integrated into the germline DNA of human ancestors and have been vertically transmitted through the host genome for millions of year
Y_5_11 — Endurance Exercise and Runner's High: Movement-Induced Altered States
Endurance exercise — sustained aerobic physical activity such as distance running, cycling, swimming, or cross-country skiing — is one of the most reliable, accessible, and physiologically well-understood pathways to alt
H_2_07 — Radiocarbon Dating Controversies and Calibration Disputes
Radiocarbon dating — the measurement of the radioactive isotope ¹⁴C in organic materials to determine their age — is archaeology's single most important chronological tool, having revolutionized the discipline since Will
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