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283 results for "land reform" — page 2 of 15
M_5_06 — Map Controversies: Vinland Map, Zeno Map, Buache Map
Beyond the famous Piri Reis map (treated in M_5_03), several other historical maps have generated intense controversy over whether they depict geographical knowledge that "shouldn't" have existed at the time they were cr
M_5_01 — Vitrified Forts of Scotland and Beyond
Over 60 hillforts across Scotland — and dozens more across France, Sweden, Germany, and beyond — exhibit walls whose stones have been fused together by extreme heat, reaching temperatures of 1,000–1,200°C.
M_5_27 — Indonesian Archaeology: Sundaland, Flores, and Maritime Southeast Asia
Indonesia is one of the most archaeologically consequential regions on Earth — a vast maritime archipelago spanning 5,000 km that preserves evidence from Homo erectus (c. 1.5 Ma at Sangiran, Java) through the enigmatic H
M_5_23 — Post-Glacial Flooding and Submerged Archaeological Landscapes
Between the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, c. 26,500–19,000 years ago) and approximately 6,000 years ago, global mean sea level rose by approximately 120–130 m, drowning continental shelves that had been habitable land. The
M_4_16 — Sundaland & Southeast Asian Lost Continent Hypothesis
Sundaland is the geological term for the exposed continental shelf of Southeast Asia that connected the present-day islands of Borneo, Java, Sumatra, and the Malay Peninsula into a single landmass during the Last Glacial
M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes
This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo
U_5_20 — Sacred Geography: Landscape, Pilgrimage, and Ritual Space
Sacred geography is the study of how human cultures invest physical landscapes with spiritual, cosmological, and mythological significance — transforming terrain into hierophanic space where the divine intersects the mat
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
W_4_21 — Rapa Nui: Isolation, Ecocide Debate, and Cultural Resilience on Easter Island
Rapa Nui (Easter Island), the most isolated inhabited island in the world — 3,700 km from South America, 2,000 km from Pitcairn — was settled by Polynesian voyagers c. 1200 CE and developed a unique civilization that car
C_4_02 — Pacific Island Serpent & Sky-Being Traditions
The Pacific Ocean encompasses over 165 million square kilometers — the largest single geographic feature on Earth — and yet every habitable island within it was settled by human navigators using knowledge systems of extr
ZF_5_08 — Coastal Geomorphology: Erosion, Beaches, and Barrier Islands
Coastal geomorphology is the study of landforms at the interface of land and sea — a dynamic zone shaped by the constant interaction of waves, tides, currents, wind, rivers, geology, biology, and increasingly by human ac
ZF_1_08 — Submarine Volcanism and Island Formation
Submarine volcanism — volcanic activity occurring beneath the ocean surface — accounts for approximately 75% of the Earth's total volcanic output and is the primary mechanism by which new oceanic crust is created, island
E_3_04 — Doggerland and Sundaland — Drowned Continental Shelves
Doggerland and Sundaland represent two of the most significant landmasses lost to post-glacial sea level rise, together encompassing hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of habitable terrain that was progressively
E_3_14 — Missoula Floods: Channeled Scablands and Catastrophism Vindicated
The Missoula Floods (also called the Spokane Floods or Bretz Floods) were a series of catastrophic megafloods — among the largest known floods in Earth's history — that swept across the inland Pacific Northwest of the Un
ZG_5_15 — Language and Gender: Gendered Speech, Pronoun Reform, and Feminist Linguistics
Language and gender — one of the most active and ideologically charged subfields of sociolinguistics — investigates the bidirectional relationship between linguistic practice and gender: how gender shapes the way people
ZG_5_04 — Writing System Reform: Simplified Chinese, Turkish Latin, Hangul
Writing system reforms — deliberate, planned changes to a language's script, orthography, or writing conventions — represent some of the most dramatic and consequential acts of language planning in history. Three landmar
ZB_5_22 — Deforestation, Land Use Change & Forest Ecology
Deforestation — the permanent conversion of forested land to non-forest uses — has transformed Earth's landscapes since the Neolithic agricultural revolution and accelerated dramatically since 1950. Between 2001 and 2020
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
ZB_4_01 — Biogeography and Island Biology
Biogeography — the study of the geographic distribution of organisms — was one of Darwin's and Wallace's most powerful lines of evidence for evolution and remains central to modern biology. Alfred Russel Wallace identifi
ZB_3_22 — Old-Growth Forests & Ancient Woodland Ecology
Old-growth forests — variously defined as primary forests that have developed over centuries without major anthropogenic disturbance — represent the most structurally complex and biologically diverse terrestrial ecosyste
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