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609 results for "water ice" — page 24 of 31
F_2_02 — Silk Road Knowledge Exchange — Technology, Religion, and Cultural Transmission
The Silk Road — more accurately Silk Routes, a network of overland and maritime trade corridors connecting China, Central Asia, South Asia, Persia, Arabia, and the Mediterranean from roughly 130 BCE to 1453 CE — was the
F_4_21 — Shared Flood Geology: Physical Evidence for Deluge Events
Flood myths appear in cultures across every inhabited continent — from the Sumerian/Akkadian flood (Ziusudra/Utnapishtim), the Hebrew Noah narrative, and the Greek Deucalion, to the Hindu Manu, the Chinese Gun-Yu, the Az
F_4_06 — Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe
This document examines Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include Europe Before the Steppe Migrations, The Indo-European Expansio
F_4_03 — Ancient Maritime Technology and Naval Knowledge
The history of maritime technology reveals that ancient civilizations achieved levels of nautical engineering and navigational skill far exceeding common assumptions. Phoenician sailors may have circumnavigated Africa ~6
F_4_07 — Sundaland and the Eden East Hypothesis
Sundaland — the vast continental shelf of Southeast Asia that was exposed during Pleistocene low sea levels — represents one of the most significant lost landscapes in human prehistory. At the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,0
F_4_25 — Doggerland: Europe's Submerged Landscape
Doggerland is the name given to the now-submerged landmass that once connected Britain to continental Europe across what is now the southern North Sea. During the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,500–19,000 years ago), when sea
F_4_17 — Mediterranean–Indian Ocean Maritime Link in Antiquity
The maritime connection between the Mediterranean world and the Indian Ocean — linking Greco-Roman Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula, East Africa, and the Indian subcontinent — was one of antiquity's most consequential trade
F_3_14 — Domestication: How Humans Reshaped Species and Themselves
Domestication — the multigenerational process by which humans selectively breed wild species, producing organisms that are genetically, morphologically, and behaviorally distinct from their wild ancestors and dependent o
F_3_12 — Ancient Quarantine and Disease Knowledge
Long before the development of germ theory (Pasteur and Koch, 1860s–1880s), ancient and medieval civilizations developed remarkably effective quarantine and disease containment practices based on empirical observation of
F_3_07 — Independent Origins of Plant Domestication
Plant domestication — the process by which wild species are genetically and morphologically transformed through human selection into cultivable, human-dependent crops — arose independently in at least 7–11 geographically
ZA_2_07 — Magnetic Monopoles: The Missing Magnets
Magnetic monopoles — hypothetical particles carrying isolated north or south magnetic charge — remain one of the most sought-after objects in physics. Maxwell's equations exhibit a tantalizing asymmetry: while electric c
ZA_2_11 — Spacetime Foam and Quantum Gravity Effects
At the Planck scale — lengths of ~$1.6 \times 10^{-35}$ m and times of ~$5.4 \times 10^{-44}$ s — quantum mechanics and general relativity collide, and the smooth spacetime continuum of Einstein's theory is expected to b
ZA_1_03 — Quantum Chromodynamics: The Strong Nuclear Force
Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of the strong nuclear force — the interaction that binds quarks into protons and neutrons and holds atomic nuclei together. Unlike electromagnetism, the strong force is mediated
ZA_1_21 — Quantum Eraser Experiments
The quantum eraser experiment is one of the most striking demonstrations of the relationship between information and quantum interference. It reveals that the presence or absence of which-path information — rather than a
ZA_5_09 — Quantum Simulation: Programming Nature to Model Nature
Quantum simulation — using one controllable quantum system to emulate the behavior of another, less tractable quantum system — was proposed by Richard Feynman in 1982 as a natural solution to the fundamental difficulty o
ZA_5_08 — Atomic Clocks: The Most Precise Instruments Ever Built
Atomic clocks — timekeeping devices that use the invariant frequencies of atomic transitions as their oscillation reference — are the most precise measuring instruments ever constructed, achieving fractional frequency un
ZA_4_13 — Quantum Spin Liquids
A quantum spin liquid (QSL) is an exotic magnetic state of matter in which quantum fluctuations prevent the localized magnetic moments (spins) in a material from ordering into any conventional pattern — no ferromagnetism
ZA_4_12 — Bose-Einstein Condensates and Ultracold Atoms
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter formed when a dilute gas of bosons (particles with integer spin) is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero (~nanokelvin), causing a macroscopic fraction of the ato
ZA_3_10 — Muon Anomalous Magnetic Moment
The anomalous magnetic moment of the muon ($a_\mu = (g-2)/2$) is one of the most precisely measured quantities in particle physics and one of the most sensitive probes for physics beyond the Standard Model. Every charged
ZA_3_05 — Neutrino Physics: Oscillations, Mass, and the Ghost Particle
Neutrinos are the lightest known massive particles, interacting only via the weak force and gravity. Three flavors exist — electron, muon, and tau — and they can transform between flavors as they propagate (neutrino osci
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