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39 results for "lime plaster" — page 2 of 2
J_2_19 — Polygonal Masonry: Precision Stone-Fitting in the Ancient World
Polygonal masonry — the construction of walls from irregularly shaped, multi-sided stone blocks fitted together with extraordinary precision, often without mortar — is among the most technically impressive and widely deb
J_2_10 — Cement, Mortar, and Ancient Binding Materials
Binding materials — substances that harden and adhere to aggregate and masonry, enabling construction of monolithic structures — represent one of the most consequential branches of ancient materials science. The history
J_4_13 — Ancient Fire Technology: Kilns, Furnaces, and Thermal Engineering
The controlled use of fire — humanity's foundational transformative technology — evolved from the earliest campfires (evidence of controlled fire use dates to at least 1 million years ago at Wonderwerk Cave, South Africa
INTERDOC_52 — Distributed Cognition: Decentralized Information Networks Across Biology
Cognition — defined functionally as adaptive information processing, decision-making, and memory — is implemented across biology in many architectures other than the centralized animal nervous system. Mycorrhizal fungal
ZB_2_26 — Collective Consciousness in Colonial Organisms
Colonial organisms — siphonophores, bryozoans, corals, hydra, and the polymorphic protozoans — perform sophisticated coordinated behavior (locomotion, feeding, defense, reproduction) without centralized nervous systems o
G_3_05 — Self-Organization and Emergence
Self-organization is the process by which global order arises from local interactions among components of an initially disordered system, without external direction or centralized control. Emergence is the closely relate
O_3_01 — Biodiversity, Ecosystem Intelligence, and the Superorganism
Earth harbors an estimated 8.7 million eukaryotic species (Mora et al. 2011), of which only ~1.5-1.8 million have been formally described — meaning roughly 80% of species remain unknown to science. When prokaryotes (bact
T_5_07 — Psychology of Sacred Space and Place
Sacred space — physical locations experienced as qualitatively distinct from ordinary space, charged with spiritual significance, numinous power, or transcendent meaning — is a universal feature of human culture. From Pa
T_5_08 — The Psychology of Awe and Wonder: Vastness, Self-Diminishment, and Transformative Experience
Awe — the emotion arising from encounters with vast, powerful, or complex phenomena that exceed one's current mental frameworks and demand cognitive accommodation (schema revision) — has emerged since the early 2000s as
D_2_14 — Valley of the Kings: Royal Tombs and Afterlife Architecture
The Valley of the Kings (Arabic: Wadi al-Muluk; ancient Egyptian: Ta-sekhet-ma'at, "The Great Field") — a narrow, arid wadi on the west bank of the Nile opposite ancient Thebes (modern Luxor) in Upper Egypt — served as t
D_2_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
D_3_16 — Jericho: Oldest Walled Settlement and Neolithic Revolution
Jericho (Arabic: Arīḥā; Hebrew: Yeriḥo; modern Tell es-Sultan) — an ancient settlement mound beside the perennial spring of Ain es-Sultan in the southern Jordan Valley, approximately 10 km north of the Dead Sea and 258 m
D_3_12 — Sacsayhuamán: Polygonal Megalithic Masonry
Sacsayhuamán (Quechua: Saqsaywaman, variously translated as "speckled falcon" or "satisfied falcon") — an immense architectural complex on a steep hill overlooking Cusco, Peru — contains some of the most awe-inspiring me
D_3_04 — Great Wall of China — Engineering, Mythology, and Function
The Great Wall of China is not a single wall but a vast network of fortifications built, rebuilt, and extended over 2,500+ years by multiple dynasties, stretching a combined total of approximately 21,196 km according to
ZD_2_13 — Explainable AI: Interpretability, Trust, and the Black Box Problem
Explainable AI (XAI) is the field concerned with making artificial intelligence systems — particularly complex machine learning models — understandable to humans. As AI systems increasingly make or influence high-stakes
Y_3_06 — Awe, Wonder, and Transcendent Emotions
Awe — the emotional response to perceived vastness that requires accommodation (cognitive restructuring of existing mental schemas) — has emerged as a frontier topic in affective neuroscience, positive psychology, and ph
S_3_08 — Carbon Capture and Negative Emissions
Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) captures CO₂ from point sources (power plants, industrial facilities) before it enters the atmosphere; Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) — also called negative emissions technologies (NETs) —
S_3_16 — Direct Air Carbon Capture: Technology, Thermodynamics, and Climate Deployment
Direct Air Capture (DAC) — the technological extraction of CO₂ directly from ambient atmospheric air (currently at ~424 ppm, or 0.042%) — represents one of the most critical and technically challenging negative emissions
S_3_03 — Geoengineering — Climate Intervention, Solar Radiation Management, and Carbon Dioxide Removal
Geoengineering encompasses large-scale deliberate interventions in the Earth's climate system to counteract global warming. Two broad categories exist: Solar Radiation Management (SRM), which reflects incoming sunlight t
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