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226 results for "cast iron" — page 2 of 12
S_5_13 — Prediction Markets: Collective Intelligence and Crowd Forecasting
Prediction markets — markets where participants buy and sell contracts whose payoffs depend on the outcome of future events — aggregate dispersed information into probability estimates with remarkable accuracy, often out
F_4_12 — Bantu Expansion: Africa's Great Migration and Iron Age Spread
The Bantu Expansion is the most consequential demographic and linguistic transformation in African history. Beginning from a homeland in the grasslands of modern Cameroon and southeastern Nigeria around 3000 BCE, Bantu-s
F_3_04 — Spread of Metallurgy: Copper, Bronze, Iron Across the Ancient World
Metallurgy developed independently in multiple regions, beginning with native copper use by ~9000 BCE and smelting by ~7000 BCE in Anatolia. The transition from copper to arsenical bronze and then tin bronze reshaped anc
F_3_19 — Shared Metallurgical Knowledge: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion
The development of metallurgy — the extraction and working of metals from ores — is one of the most consequential technological achievements in human history, and one of the best arenas for examining the fundamental ques
M_2_10 — Coral Castle and Modern Megalithic Claims
Coral Castle (originally "Rock Gate Park") is a structure in Homestead, Florida, built single-handedly by Latvian-American immigrant Edward Leedskalnin (1887–1951) between 1923 and 1951. The site comprises approximately
M_1_03 — Iron Pillar of Delhi — Unexplained Corrosion Resistance
The Iron Pillar of Delhi is a 7.21-meter, 6.5-tonne wrought iron column standing in the Qutb Minar complex in Mehrauli, New Delhi, dating to approximately 402 CE during the Gupta dynasty — most likely commissioned by Cha
W_1_09 — Canaanite Religion Beyond Ugarit — El, Asherah, and Ba'al in the Iron Age
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
W_3_01 — Bantu Cosmology, Migration, and Iron Traditions
The Bantu expansion (~3000 BCE–500 CE) is one of the largest and most consequential human migrations in history: speakers of proto-Bantu languages from the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland spread across most of sub-Saharan Af
W_5_28 — Tairona Civilization and Ciudad Perdida
The Tairona were a complex chiefdom-level society that flourished in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountains of northern Colombia from approximately 200 CE to the Spanish conquest (~1600 CE). Their most spectacular ac
C_5_39 — Feng Shui: Chinese Geomancy, Spatial Harmony, and the Built Environment
Feng shui (風水, literally "wind-water") is a Chinese system of spatial analysis and environmental design with roots extending back at least 3,500 years, aimed at harmonizing human structures and activities with the natura
Z_5_02 — Metagenomics and Environmental DNA
Metagenomics — the sequencing and analysis of genetic material recovered directly from environmental samples without culturing organisms — has revealed that the vast majority of Earth's microbial diversity was invisible
E_3_17 — Environmental Catastrophe–Civilization Correlation Timeline
Systematic cross-referencing of paleoclimate proxy records (ice cores, speleothems, tree rings, marine sediments) with archaeological and historical records reveals repeated correlations between abrupt environmental shif
ZC_5_19 — Network Society — Castells
Manuel Castells (born 1942 in Hellín, Spain), professor at the University of Southern California and emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, produced one of the most ambitious sociological analyses of the lat
G_1_05 — eDNA and Environmental DNA — Reading Invisible Life
Environmental DNA (eDNA) refers to genetic material shed by organisms into their environment — through skin cells, mucus, feces, urine, gametes, decomposing tissue, pollen, root exudates, and other biological residues —
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
M_1_14 — Vitrified Forts: Scotland's Melted Stone Enigma
Vitrified forts are Iron Age hillforts (predominantly in Scotland, with additional examples in France, Scandinavia, Germany, and Portugal) whose stone walls display evidence of extreme heat exposure — temperatures exceed
M_1_19 — Bog Bodies, Ritual Preservation, and Wetland Sacrifice
Bog bodies — human remains naturally preserved in the acidic, oxygen-poor, tannic environment of Northern European peat bogs — constitute one of archaeology's most dramatic categories of evidence. Over 1,000 bog bodies h
W_1_22 — Hittite Empire: Detailed Analysis
The Hittite Empire (c. 1650–1178 BCE) was one of the great powers of the Late Bronze Age, dominating Anatolia (modern Turkey) and rivaling Egypt, Babylon, and Assyria as a peer kingdom in the international system of the
W_3_22 — Mapungubwe Kingdom
Mapungubwe (c. 1075–1290 CE) was the first complex state society in southern Africa, located at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers in present-day South Africa. The site demonstrated the earliest evidence of
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
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