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943 results for "tile art" — page 27 of 48
S_1_10 — Internet of Things and Ubiquitous Computing
The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to the network of physical objects — devices, vehicles, appliances, industrial equipment, wearables, environmental sensors — embedded with electronics, software, and connectivity that
S_3_01 — Climate Change, Civilization, and Deep-Time Context
Earth's climate has always changed — but the current rate and mechanism are unprecedented in geological history. This document places the modern climate crisis within the deep-time context that the corpus demands: from t
S_5_01 — Nanotechnology, Molecular Machines, and Material Frontiers
Nanotechnology — the manipulation of matter at the 1-100 nanometer scale (1 nm = 10⁻⁹ meters; a human hair is ~80,000 nm wide) — represents a convergence of physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering at the scale where
S_5_09 — Wearable Technology: Biosensors, Continuous Monitoring, and Digital Health
Wearable technology — electronic devices worn on the body that continuously collect physiological, activity, and environmental data — has evolved from simple pedometers into sophisticated health-monitoring platforms worn
S_5_11 — Digital Authoritarianism: Surveillance States and Techno-Social Control
Digital authoritarianism — the use of digital technologies by authoritarian and semi-authoritarian governments to surveil, repress, censor, and control their populations — has emerged as one of the most consequential pol
S_2_17 — Tissue Engineering: Scaffolds, Bioreactors, and Organ Fabrication
Tissue engineering — the fabrication of biological substitutes to restore, maintain, or improve tissue function — was formally defined by Robert Langer (MIT) and Joseph Vacanti (Harvard/Boston Children's Hospital) in the
S_2_06 — Regenerative Medicine and Bioprinting
Regenerative medicine aims to repair, replace, or regenerate damaged tissues and organs using biological approaches — tissue engineering, stem cell therapy, bioprinting, and xenotransplantation. The organ shortage crisis
S_2_07 — Neurotechnology and Cognitive Enhancement
Neurotechnology encompasses tools that interface with the nervous system to monitor, modulate, or enhance neural function. Non-invasive brain stimulation: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) uses magnetic pulses to s
S_2_13 — Xenotransplantation: Cross-Species Organs and Bioengineered Tissues
Xenotransplantation — the transplantation of organs, tissues, or cells from one species to another — is being pursued as a solution to the critical global organ shortage. In the US alone, over 100,000 people await organ
F_1_29 — Aboriginal Australian First Arrival & Deep-Time Heritage
The first arrival of humans in Australia represents the oldest known maritime colonization in human history and one of the most significant events in the story of Homo sapiens. Reaching the continent now called Australia
F_1_25 — Roman-Era Artifacts in the Americas
The claim that Roman-era artifacts have been found in the Americas — suggesting trans-Atlantic contact between the Roman world and pre-Columbian civilizations — is a recurring theme in diffusionist and alternative archae
F_1_11 — Sweet Potato Paradox — Pre-Columbian Trans-Pacific Contact Evidence
The sweet potato paradox — the presence of Ipomoea batatas (a plant of unambiguous South American origin) across Polynesia in pre-Columbian contexts — is the single most widely accepted piece of evidence for trans-Pacifi
F_1_24 — Phoenician Contact with the Americas
The hypothesis that Phoenician or Carthaginian sailors reached the Americas before Columbus is one of the most persistent and emotionally charged claims in the field of pre-Columbian transatlantic contact — a proposition
F_2_09 — Currency and Coinage Diffusion
The invention of standardized currency and coinage transformed human economic interaction and represents one of the great innovations in the history of exchange. Remarkably, coinage appears to have been independently inv
F_4_05 — Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse
This document examines Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include The Interconnected World of ~1400–1200 BCE, The Amarna Letters — Evidence
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_3_21 — Compass Navigation and Its Global Spread
The magnetic compass — one of China's "Four Great Inventions" — transformed navigation from a coastal, celestial, and dead-reckoning art into an all-weather, open-ocean capability. [KEY FINDING] The earliest confirmed re
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_19 — Shared Metallurgical Knowledge: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion
The development of metallurgy — the extraction and working of metals from ores — is one of the most consequential technological achievements in human history, and one of the best arenas for examining the fundamental ques
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