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41 results for "coastal wetland" — page 2 of 3
M_5_04 — Submerged Structures of the Mediterranean — Pavlopetri to Baiae
The Mediterranean Sea contains some of the world's best-documented and most archaeologically significant submerged settlements and structures — sites that were built on dry land and subsequently inundated by combinations
W_5_27 — Valdivia Culture: Oldest Pottery in the Americas
The Valdivia culture (~3500–1800 BCE) of coastal Ecuador produced the oldest known pottery in the Americas, making it one of the earliest complex societies in the Western Hemisphere. Discovered by Emilio Estrada in 1956
ZF_3_09 — Ocean Currents and Human Migration Patterns
Ocean currents have shaped human migration, trade, and cultural exchange throughout prehistory and history — functioning as both highways and barriers that profoundly influenced which populations could reach which coastl
ZF_1_05 — Tsunami Science and Warning Systems
Tsunamis — long-wavelength ocean waves generated by sudden displacement of the water column — are among the most destructive natural hazards, capable of crossing entire ocean basins and devastating coastlines thousands o
E_3_13 — Storegga Slide: Mega-Tsunami and Mesolithic Europe
The Storegga Slide (Norwegian: Storegga-raset; Store = "great," egga = "edge") — a series of submarine landslides on the continental slope off western Norway at approximately 64°N — constitutes one of the largest known m
E_3_03 — Ice Age Civilizations — Evidence for Complexity During the Last Glacial Maximum
The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ~26,500-19,000 BP) — when ice sheets covered ~32% of the global land surface and sea levels dropped ~120 meters below present — was not a period of human stagnation but of remarkable cultur
Ocean_Climate_Civilization_Nexus
The relationship between ocean systems and human civilization is one of the most consequential and least integrated topics in historical analysis — most conventional histories treat the ocean as a static background, when
ZB_3_08 — Freshwater Ecology
Freshwater ecosystems — rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands, and groundwater systems — cover only ~0.8% of Earth's surface and contain ~0.01% of the world's water, yet they support a disproportionate ~6% of all descr
D_3_02 — Paracas Trident, Candelabra, and Cross-Cultural Trident Symbolism
The Paracas Candelabra (also called "Candelabro de Paracas" or "the Trident") is a massive geoglyph carved into the sandy hillside of the Paracas Peninsula on Peru's southern coast, overlooking Pisco Bay. Measuring ~180
D_4_02 — Submerged Structures & Underwater Archaeology
Since the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,500–19,000 BP), global sea levels have risen approximately 120–130 meters, inundating an estimated 25 million km² of formerly habitable land — an area larger than North America. Any co
L_1_06 — Human Migration Synthesis — DNA, Language, and Culture
The synthesis of genetic, linguistic, and archaeological evidence has transformed understanding of human migration over the past three decades.
L_1_18 — Human Migration: Out of Africa, Dispersal Patterns, and the Peopling of the World
The migration of Homo sapiens out of Africa and across the globe is one of the most extensively studied processes in human evolutionary history, now reconstructed through converging evidence from genetics (mitochondrial
L_2_05 — Americas Peopling Genetics
The peopling of the Americas is one of the clearest cases where ancient DNA and archaeology have converged to overturn an older narrative. The core model now favored by genetics is that the main ancestry of Indigenous Am
L_2_09 — Genetic History of the Americas: Clovis to Contact
The genetic history of the Americas — from the initial peopling of the New World to the devastating population collapse after European contact — is one of the most intensively studied and rapidly evolving areas of paleog
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_10 — Kennewick Man and the Pre-Clovis Debate
The question of when and how humans first reached the Americas has been one of archaeology's most contentious debates for over a century. For decades, the Clovis First model dominated: the earliest Americans were big-gam
O_2_13 — Isostatic Rebound: Post-Glacial Land Rise and Coastal Change
Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA, commonly called isostatic rebound or post-glacial rebound) is the ongoing process by which Earth's crust and mantle adjust to the removal of the immense weight of continental ice sheets
M_1_17 — Underwater City Discoveries (Dwarka, Yonaguni, Pavlopetri)
The discovery and investigation of submerged archaeological sites — cities, harbors, temples, and infrastructure now lying beneath coastal waters due to post-glacial sea level rise, tectonic subsidence, or local geologic
ZF_2_00 — Marine Biology Ecology: Subfolder Summary
E_3_15 — Sea-Level Curves: Eustatic Change from LGM to Present
Sea-level curves — graphical reconstructions of how global mean sea level has changed through time — represent one of the most important datasets in Quaternary science, recording the waxing and waning of continental ice
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