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544 results for "knowledge graph" — page 2 of 28
ZF_4_11 — Sea Ice Dynamics and Polar Oceanography
Sea ice — frozen seawater that forms a thin crust (typically 1–4 m thick) over polar and subpolar oceans — is one of Earth's most dynamic and climate-sensitive features, playing a disproportionate role in global climate
ZF_4_06 — Ocean Remote Sensing and Satellite Oceanography
Satellite oceanography — the use of Earth-orbiting sensors to observe ocean properties from space — has transformed ocean science since the 1970s from a data-sparse field reliant on sparse ship transects to a globally co
ZF_4_10 — Coral as Climate Archive — Paleoceanographic Proxies
Coral paleoclimatology uses the geochemical and physical properties of coral skeletons as high-resolution archives of past ocean conditions — providing some of the most detailed tropical climate records available for the
ZF_1_04 — Ocean-Climate Coupling: Paleoceanography
The ocean is Earth's primary climate regulator — absorbing ~93% of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gases and ~30% of anthropogenic CO₂, storing 50 times more carbon than the atmosphere, and driving glacial-intergla
ZF_1_17 — Abyssal Trench Biogeography
Hadal trenches — oceanic depressions exceeding 6,000 m depth, formed by tectonic subduction — represent Earth's deepest and least explored biomes, harboring unique ecosystems under extreme pressures (600–1,100 atm), perp
ZF_1_16 — Paleoceanography and Foraminifera: Reconstructing Ancient Oceans from Microfossil Archives
Paleoceanography — the study of the history of the oceans and their role in Earth's climate system through geological time — relies fundamentally on the geochemical analysis of foraminifera (single-celled protists with c
ZG_1_11 — Arabic Script — Calligraphy, Typography, and Islamic Writing
The Arabic script is the third most widely used writing system in the world (after Latin and Chinese), employed to write not only Arabic but also Persian, Urdu, Pashto, Ottoman Turkish, Malay (Jawi), Swahili (historicall
ZG_1_21 — Logographic Writing Systems
Logographic writing systems — scripts in which individual symbols (logograms) represent whole words or morphemes rather than individual sounds — are among the oldest and most cognitively distinctive forms of human commun
J_3_17 — Technological Regression: Civilizational Knowledge Loss and Recovery
Technological regression — the loss of previously achieved technical capabilities within a civilization or across civilizational transitions — is a well-documented phenomenon in the historical record, challenging linear
J_5_09 — Ancient Cartography and Mapmaking
The representation of geographical space in graphic form — cartography — is attested from deep antiquity and represents a fundamental intellectual achievement: the abstraction of three-dimensional lived space into two-di
Q_4_17 — Crystallography: Structure Determination and Symmetry
Crystallography — the science of determining the arrangement of atoms within crystalline solids — has been one of the most productive scientific disciplines in history, contributing to 29 Nobel Prizes across physics, che
INTERDOC_45 — The Suppression Timeline: Knowledge Destruction, Demonization, and Erasure from Prehistory to Present
This document presents a comprehensive chronological timeline of suppression — the deliberate destruction of knowledge, erasure of cultures, demonization of beliefs, and persecution of peoples — from the earliest documen
INTERDOC_24 — Library Destruction and the Erasure of Knowledge
[KEY FINDING] The Library of Alexandria — founded by Ptolemy I Soter (~295 BCE), estimated to have held 400,000–700,000 scrolls — suffered multiple destruction events: Julius Caesar's fire (48 BCE, which may have burned
Archaic_Knowledge_Continuity
This cross-section synthesis document traces how specific technical, cosmological, and medical knowledge traditions survived, transformed, or were independently rediscovered across major civilizational transitions. It ma
ZB_4_11 — Island Ecology: Biogeography, Endemism, and Evolutionary Radiation
Island ecology — centered on the theory of island biogeography developed by Robert MacArthur and Edward O. Wilson (1963, 1967) — provides one of ecology's most influential theoretical frameworks, explaining how species d
ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge
Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi
ZC_2_08 — Demography and Population Studies
Demography is the scientific study of human population — its size, structure, distribution, and change through births, deaths, and migration. World population reached ~8 billion in November 2022 (UN), having grown from ~
G_4_18 — Biogeography and Ancient Distribution Patterns
Biogeography — the study of the spatial distribution of organisms across the planet, both present and past — is one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding Earth history, evolutionary processes, and the mechani
G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment
Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c
G_3_25 — Decolonizing Knowledge Systems: Epistemic Justice and Cognitive Liberation
Decolonizing knowledge systems is a global intellectual and political movement arguing that the dominance of Western-origin epistemology in universities, research institutions, and international organizations is not a ne
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