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E_5_03 — The End-Triassic Mass Extinction
The End-Triassic mass extinction (c. 201.564 ± 0.015 million years ago) was one of the "Big Five" mass extinctions in Earth's history, eliminating approximately 76% of all species and ~50% of genera, clearing the ecologi
E_5_07 — Post-Extinction Recovery Patterns: Adaptive Radiation After Mass Dying
Mass extinctions are not merely episodes of destruction — they fundamentally reshape the trajectory of life through the recovery dynamics that follow. Post-extinction recovery is typically slow (5–10 million years for fu
E_5_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th
E_5_06 — Holocene Sixth Mass Extinction: Current Biodiversity Crisis
The Holocene "Sixth Mass Extinction" hypothesis holds that current species loss rates are 100–1,000 times the normal background extinction rate, driven primarily by human activity: habitat destruction, overexploitation,
E_5_02 — The Ordovician-Silurian Mass Extinction
The Late Ordovician mass extinction (c. 445–444 million years ago, at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary) was the second-most severe extinction event in Earth's history in terms of percentage of species lost — approximatel
E_5_05 — Late Devonian Mass Extinction: Kellwasser and Hangenberg Events
The Late Devonian mass extinction (~372–359 Ma) was not a single catastrophe but a series of extinction pulses spanning approximately 25 million years, making it unique among the "Big Five" mass extinctions. The two most
ZG_5_21 — Indus Valley Script: The Undeciphered Writing System
The Indus Valley Script (also called the Harappan script) remains one of the last major undeciphered writing systems from the ancient world. [KEY FINDING] Used by the Indus Valley Civilization (c. 2600–1900 BCE) — one of
ZG_1_15 — African Writing Systems: Bamum, Vai, N'Ko, Ge'ez, and Nsibidi
Africa has produced a remarkable diversity of indigenous writing systems spanning millennia — from the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics (c. 3200 BCE) and Meroitic script (c. 300 BCE, Kingdom of Kush) to scores of modern sc
ZG_1_09 — Writing Materials — Clay, Papyrus, Parchment, Paper
The history of writing materials is the material history of human knowledge itself — the physical substrates on which civilizations recorded thought, law, literature, science, and commerce determined what could be writte
ZG_1_02 — Cuneiform — The World's First Writing System
Cuneiform — from Latin cuneus ("wedge") — is the earliest known writing system, invented in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) by the Sumerians circa 3400–3100 BCE in the city of Uruk. It began as a system of pictographi
ZG_1_03 — Egyptian Hieroglyphics — Sacred Writing and Decipherment
Egyptian hieroglyphics (mdw nṯr, "god's words") constitute one of the world's oldest writing systems, attested from ~3250–3100 BCE (the Abydos labels and Narmer Palette) through the 4th century CE (the final dated inscri
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
ZG_4_19 — Language Extinction Crisis
The world is experiencing an unprecedented crisis of linguistic diversity — of the approximately 7,168 living languages cataloged by Ethnologue (25th edition, 2022), an estimated 43% (3,045 languages) are classified as e
J_1_11 — Antikythera Mechanism and Ancient Computing Devices
The Antikythera Mechanism — recovered in 1901 from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera (dated to c. 70–60 BCE by ceramic and coin evidence; the device itself likely constructed c. 150–100 BCE) — is
J_2_14 — Ancient Ink and Writing Materials: Chemistry of Record-Keeping
The technologies of writing — the materials on which it was inscribed and the substances with which it was applied — constituted the physical foundation of ancient record-keeping, administration, literature, science, and
INTERDOC_40 — Shapeshifting as Universal Constant: Therianthropy Across Time
[KEY FINDING] The Lion-Man (Löwenmensch) — a 31.1 cm mammoth ivory figurine excavated from Hohlenstein-Stadel cave, Swabian Jura, Germany — was carved approximately 40,000 years ago. It is the oldest known representation
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_2_19 — Epigenetics & Chromatin Modification
Epigenetics — literally "above genetics" — encompasses heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alterations to the DNA sequence itself. The term was coined by Conrad Hal Waddington in 1942 to describe how
G_1_20 — Dendrochronology, Luminescence & Advanced Dating Methods
Beyond radiocarbon dating, archaeology and geochronology rely on a suite of complementary dating methods, each with distinct strengths, limitations, and applicable time ranges. Dendrochronology (tree-ring dating), pionee
O_2_12 — Great Rift Valley: Continental Splitting and Hominid Cradle
The East African Rift System (EARS) — commonly called the Great Rift Valley — is one of Earth's most geologically dramatic and scientifically significant features: an active continental rift zone stretching approximately
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