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3,565 results for "de re publica" — page 20 of 179
ZA_3_07 — Particle Accelerators and Colliders: Probing the Fundamental Structure of Matter
Particle accelerators — machines that use electromagnetic fields to accelerate charged particles to extreme energies and smash them together — are humanity's most powerful microscopes, probing matter at scales below 10⁻¹
I_2_01 — UAP Government Disclosure Timeline (1947–2026)
The history of government engagement with the UFO/UAP phenomenon spans nearly 80 years, from the first official U.S. Air Force investigations in 1947 through the modern era of Congressional hearings and institutional dis
I_5_10 — Crop Circles: History, Analysis, and Debunking
Crop circles (or "agriglyphs") are geometric patterns created by the systematic flattening of cereal crops, predominantly wheat, barley, and rapeseed. Although simple circular formations have been reported sporadically s
I_4_05 — UAP Photography, Video Evidence, and Analysis
Visual evidence — photographs and videos — has been central to UAP discourse since the mid-20th century, yet remains among the most contentious categories of evidence due to challenges of provenance, chain of custody, ca
I_4_16 — UAP Economic Implications of Disclosure
The potential economic implications of UAP disclosure — the scenario in which governments formally acknowledge the existence of advanced technologies of unknown or non-human origin and either release or fail to contain k
I_4_13 — Space-Based Detection: Satellite and Orbital Monitoring
The most comprehensive sensor network ever built by humanity — the U.S. Space Surveillance Network (SSN), the Defense Support Program (DSP) infrared satellite constellation, its successor the Space-Based Infrared System
V_4_11 — Coding Theory: Error Detection, Correction, and Information Integrity
Coding theory — the mathematical study of error-detecting and error-correcting codes — ensures the reliable transmission and storage of digital information across noisy communication channels, corrupted storage media, an
V_3_06 — Differential Equations: Modeling Change and Dynamics
Differential equations describe how quantities change and are the primary mathematical language of physics, engineering, biology, and economics. From Newton's second law (F = ma, a second-order ODE) to Einstein's field e
V_2_04 — Geometry: Euclid to Non-Euclidean Revolution
Euclid's Elements* (c. 300 BCE, Alexandria) is the most influential textbook in human history — the second most printed book after the Bible — establishing the axiomatic method** (definitions, postulates, common notions
M_5_08 — Elongated Skulls Expanded: Global Distribution and Genetics
Artificial cranial modification (ACM) — the deliberate reshaping of the infant skull through binding, boarding, or padding — is one of the most widespread and ancient cultural practices in human history, documented indep
M_5_22 — Mesolithic Europe: Hunter-Gatherer Complexity Before Agriculture
The Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age, ~10,000–5000 BCE in Europe) — the period between the end of the last Ice Age and the arrival of farming — has been traditionally treated as a brief, uninteresting interlude between the d
M_5_02 — Saqqara Bird — Ancient Aerodynamics Debate
The Saqqara Bird is a small carved sycamore-wood artifact (catalog #6347) housed in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, dated to approximately 200 BCE (Ptolemaic period).
M_5_04 — Submerged Structures of the Mediterranean — Pavlopetri to Baiae
The Mediterranean Sea contains some of the world's best-documented and most archaeologically significant submerged settlements and structures — sites that were built on dry land and subsequently inundated by combinations
M_3_07 — Stone Age Precision — Avebury, Carnac, and European Megaliths
The European megalithic tradition — spanning from approximately 4800 to 1500 BCE across Atlantic Europe (Iberia, France, the British Isles, Scandinavia, and the central Mediterranean) — produced tens of thousands of monu
M_3_09 — Precision Granite Machining Debate: Petrie to Dunn
The debate over precision granite machining in ancient Egypt has persisted for over 130 years, originating with Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie (1853-1942), the father of modern Egyptology, who meticulously documente
M_4_11 — Göbekli Tepe Climate Reconstruction: What Supported Its Builders?
Göbekli Tepe (~9600-8000 BCE), the monumental stone pillar sanctuary in southeastern Turkey, presents a fundamental puzzle: how did pre-agricultural hunter-gatherers — people who had not yet domesticated crops or animals
M_4_10 — Giants in the Archaeological Record: Separating Fact from Fiction
Claims of giant human skeletons — remains of individuals standing 7, 8, 10, or even 30+ feet tall — are among the most persistent themes in alternative archaeology, appearing in 19th-century newspaper accounts, religious
M_2_12 — Çatalhöyük — Neolithic Revolution and Anomalous Urbanism
Çatalhöyük (pronounced "chah-tahl-hö-yük") — a Neolithic proto-city on the Konya Plain of south-central Turkey, occupied approximately 7500–5700 BCE — is one of the most important archaeological sites in the world for un
M_2_14 — Tiwanaku and the Altiplano — High-Altitude Anomalous Engineering
Tiwanaku (also spelled Tiahuanaco) — located at 3,850 meters elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano, approximately 20 km southeast of Lake Titicaca — was the capital of one of the most significant pre-Columbian civilization
M_2_03 — Yonaguni Monument — Natural or Man-Made?
The Yonaguni Monument is a massive underwater rock formation located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, Japan's westernmost point in the Ryukyu archipelago.
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