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60 results for "compass variation" — page 2 of 3
ZF_3_05 — Ancient Maritime Navigation and Wayfinding
Long before the compass, sextant, or chronometer, ancient maritime cultures navigated thousands of miles of open ocean using sophisticated systems of environmental observation — star paths, ocean swell patterns, wind shi
Z_5_13 — Molecular Clocks: Timing Evolution at the Sequence Level
Molecular clocks — the observation that DNA and protein sequences accumulate substitutions (mutations that become fixed in a lineage) at approximately regular rates over long periods of evolutionary time, enabling the es
Z_3_12 — Genetics of Alcohol Metabolism
The genetics of alcohol metabolism provides one of the clearest examples of how specific genetic variants influence behavior and disease risk at a population scale. Ethanol is metabolized primarily through a two-step oxi
Z_1_07 — Genetic Recombination and Crossing Over
Genetic recombination — the physical exchange of DNA segments between homologous chromosomes during meiosis — is a fundamental biological process that generates genetic diversity, ensures proper chromosome segregation, a
Z_1_03 — Human Genome Project and Its Legacy
The Human Genome Project (HGP), launched in 1990 and completed in 2003, was the largest coordinated biological research effort in history — a $3 billion, 13-year international collaboration to sequence all ~3.2 billion b
K_1_03 — Free Energy Principle and Predictive Processing
The Free Energy Principle (FEP), developed by neuroscientist Karl Friston (2006-present), is one of the most ambitious theoretical frameworks in 21st-century science: it attempts to explain the EXISTENCE, BEHAVIOR, and C
E_4_19 — Mono Lake and Gothenburg Excursions: Short Geomagnetic Events
Geomagnetic excursions are brief, extreme departures of the Earth's magnetic field from its normal dipolar configuration — events during which the virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) deviates by more than 40–45° from the geog
ZG_4_09 — Sociolinguistics: Language, Power, and Social Identity
Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and society — how social factors (class, gender, ethnicity, age, region, network, situation) systematically shape the way people speak, and conversely, h
J_1_10 — Electromagnetism and Ancient Awareness
Ancient civilizations observed and utilized several electromagnetic phenomena — including magnetism (lodestones), static electricity (amber), lightning, and electric fish — without developing a unified theory of electrom
J_5_14 — Greek Mathematical Instruments: Precision Tools
Ancient Greek civilization produced the most sophisticated mathematical and scientific instruments of the pre-modern world — devices that embody the Greek integration of theoretical mathematics with practical engineering
J_5_11 — Chinese Ancient Inventions: The Technological Cornucopia
Ancient and medieval China produced an extraordinary range of technological innovations — many predating their European counterparts by centuries to millennia. The classic formulation identifies the "Four Great Invention
J_4_12 — Polynesian Navigation Canoes: Oceanic Vessel Engineering
The Polynesian double-hulled sailing canoe — waka hourua (Māori), wa'a kaulua (Hawaiian), vaka (general Polynesian) — was the vessel that made possible the most extraordinary feat of maritime exploration in human history
Q_4_13 — Classical Mechanics: Newton, Lagrange, Hamilton, and the Action Principle
Classical mechanics — the study of the motion of bodies under the action of forces — is the oldest and most mature branch of physics, tracing from Galileo's kinematics (1638) and Newton's three laws and universal gravita
Q_4_32 — The Fundamental Constants: Physics, Life, and Mathematics
The universe runs on numbers — and not arbitrary ones. A small set of fundamental constants, mostly dimensionless, determines every property of matter, energy, space, and time. Change any of them by a fraction and atoms
INTERDOC_21 — Meditation, Mysticism, and the Neuroscience Bridge
[KEY FINDING] Richard Davidson's lab at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, beginning in 2004, demonstrated that long-term meditators (>10,000 hours) — particularly Tibetan Buddhist monks — generate gamma wave oscillati
ZB_1_03 — Animal Navigation and Migration — Magnetism, Stars, and Memory
Animal migration and navigation represent some of the most astonishing feats in biology: monarch butterflies traveling 4,000 km across North America using a time-compensated sun compass; Arctic terns completing 71,000-km
ZC_1_15 — Sociology of Emotions
Sociology of emotions examines how emotions are socially shaped, managed, and structured — challenging the assumption that feelings are purely biological or individual. Arlie Russell Hochschild (The Managed Heart, 1983)
T_4_06 — Cross-Cultural Psychology
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how culture shapes human thought, emotion, and behavior — and which psychological processes are universal versus culturally specific. The field distinguishes between etic approaches
T_2_04 — Positive Psychology & Wellbeing Science
Positive psychology — the scientific study of what makes life worth living — was formally launched by Martin Seligman in his 1998 APA presidential address, shifting psychology's traditional focus from pathology and dysfu
T_5_19 — Empathy: Neuroscience, Mirror Neurons & Moral Development
Empathy — the capacity to share, understand, and respond to others' emotional and cognitive states — is a multi-component phenomenon with deep evolutionary roots, distinct neural substrates, and profound implications for
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