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110 results for "biological transfer" — page 2 of 6
A_3_01 — Kebra Nagast: The Glory of Kings (Ethiopian)
The Kebra Nagast ("Glory of Kings") is a 14th-century CE Ethiopian text — written in Ge'ez, the classical Ethiopian liturgical language — that serves as the foundation myth of the Solomonic dynasty of Ethiopia and the sp
U_5_16 — AI-Generated Art: Creativity, Authorship & the Machine
AI-generated art — images, music, text, and video produced through machine learning systems — has become the defining creative controversy of the 2020s. Beginning with DeepDream (2015) and neural style transfer, accelera
U_2_08 — Digital Art and Generative Art
Digital art — visual art created with or substantially mediated by digital technology — and generative art — art produced in whole or part by autonomous systems (algorithms, rules, or AI) — represent a fundamental expans
X_4_18 — Fractal Physiology: The Mathematics of Healthy Life
The body is a fractal machine. From capillaries that branch like river deltas to the 70 m² of lung surface packed into a 4-litre chest cavity, and from the beat-to-beat complexity of a healthy heart to the trabecular sca
X_3_25 — Antibiotic Resistance Crisis
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) — the ability of microorganisms to survive exposure to drugs that once killed them — is one of the most serious threats to global public health in the twenty-first century. [KEY FINDING] A
X_3_18 — Immunotherapy: From Coley's Toxins to Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immunotherapy — harnessing the immune system to fight cancer and other diseases — was pioneered by William Coley (Memorial Hospital, New York), who injected bacterial toxins into inoperable sarcomas beginning in 1891 and
W_2_04 — Tibetan Buddhism, Bön, and Hidden Knowledge (Terma)
Tibet's religious traditions represent one of the world's most elaborate systems for the exploration and mapping of consciousness states — from the Six Yogas of Naropa to the Dzogchen practices of pristine awareness, fro
W_5_25 — Silk Road & Ancient Trade Networks
The Silk Road — a term coined by German geographer Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877 (Seidenstraße) — refers to the interconnected network of overland and maritime trade routes linking China, Central Asia, the Indian subc
ZF_2_16 — Mesopelagic Twilight Zone Ecology
The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is the largest and least understood habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 1–10 billion tonnes of fish biomass, hosting the largest animal migra
ZF_2_07 — Marine Microbiology and Plankton
Marine microorganisms — bacteria, archaea, protists, viruses, and microscopic algae — constitute the invisible foundation of ocean life, driving global biogeochemical cycles, producing roughly half of the world's oxygen,
ZF_3_18 — Microplastic Pollution in the Ocean
Microplastics — plastic particles <5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean, present from surface waters to the deepest hadal trenches, from Arctic sea ice to
ZF_5_21 — Invasive Species: Ecological Disruption, Biosecurity, and Marine Invasions
Invasive species — organisms introduced outside their native range that cause ecological, economic, or health damage — represent one of the top five drivers of global biodiversity loss, alongside habitat destruction, ove
ZF_4_16 — Microplastics in the Ocean: Sources, Pathways, and Ecological Impact
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean. First systematically described as a marine pollutant by Richard Thomp
ZF_4_01 — Ocean Acidification and Marine Chemistry
The global ocean has absorbed approximately 30% of anthropogenic CO₂ emissions since the Industrial Revolution and over 90% of excess heat from the enhanced greenhouse effect, making it the planet's primary climate buffe
ZF_1_20 — Ocean Stratification
Ocean stratification — the formation of stable density layers in the water column due to gradients in temperature, salinity, and pressure — is one of the most fundamental physical characteristics of the global ocean and
ZF_1_14 — Ocean-Atmosphere Coupling: Heat Exchange, Evaporation, and Weather
The ocean-atmosphere interface — the boundary between Earth's two great fluid envelopes — is the planet's most important energy exchange surface. The ocean absorbs approximately 93% of the excess heat trapped by anthropo
ZF_1_18 — Mesopelagic Zone Ecology
The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is emerging as one of the most ecologically and biogeochemically important yet poorly understood habitats on Earth. [KEY FINDING] Despite receiving
Z_5_21 — Mobile Genetic Elements: Transposons, Retrotransposons, and Genomic Plasticity
Mobile genetic elements (MGEs) — DNA sequences capable of moving within and between genomes — constitute a staggering ~45% of the human genome, far exceeding the ~1.5% that encodes proteins. Discovered by Barbara McClint
Z_5_22 — Bacteriophage Biology: Viruses That Shape the Microbial World
Bacteriophages (phages) — viruses that exclusively infect bacteria — are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, with an estimated global population of ~10³¹ particles, outnumbering bacteria by approximately 10:1
Z_3_04 — Comparative Genomics and Cross-Species Analysis
Comparative genomics — the systematic comparison of genome sequences across species — has become the primary tool for understanding genome evolution, identifying functionally important sequences, and reconstructing the T
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