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3,688 results for "G protein" — page 3 of 185
M_5_13 — Construction Replication Experiments: Testing Ancient Building Claims
Construction replication experiments — systematic attempts to reproduce ancient architectural and engineering achievements using period-appropriate tools and techniques — constitute a critical methodological approach wit
M_5_05 — Archaeological Hoaxes and Forgeries — A Cautionary Catalog
The history of archaeology is punctuated by famous frauds, hoaxes, and forgeries — intentional deceptions that have misled researchers, distorted public understanding, and, in some cases, caused decades of wasted scholar
M_5_19 — Mahabharata: Archaeological and Historical Evidence
The Mahabharata, attributed to the sage Vyasa, is one of the two great Sanskrit epics of ancient India — an encyclopedic text of approximately 200,000 verses (the longest epic poem in world literature, roughly ten times
M_5_21 — Maritime Archaeology & Submerged Ancient Sites
Maritime archaeology — the study of human interaction with the sea through material remains — has revealed that the ocean floor and coastal shelves hold some of the most significant and best-preserved evidence of ancient
M_5_03 — Piri Reis Map and Cartographic Anomalies
The Piri Reis map is a fragment of a world map drawn on gazelle parchment by the Ottoman admiral and cartographer Piri Reis (Ahmed Muhiddin Piri) in 1513 CE, rediscovered in the Topkapi Palace library, Istanbul, in 1929.
M_5_18 — Mound Builders: Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian, and the Erasure of Indigenous Achievement
The "Mound Builders" refers to the diverse Indigenous North American cultures that constructed elaborate earthen mounds across eastern North America from approximately 3700 BCE (Watson Brake, Louisiana) through European
M_5_20 — Archaeobotany & Paleoethnobotany: Plant Evidence in the Archaeological Record
Archaeobotany (paleoethnobotany) is the scientific study of plant remains from archaeological contexts, encompassing macrobotanical analysis (seeds, wood, fibers), microbotanical techniques (phytoliths, starch grains, po
M_5_15 — LiDAR Archaeological Discoveries Catalog
Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) — an active remote sensing technology using pulsed laser light to create high-resolution three-dimensional surface models — has revolutionized archaeology since its first systematic ar
M_5_10 — Controversial Datings: Sphinx, Bosnian Pyramids, Richat Structure
Three sites have become lightning rods for alternative dating controversies — each challenged by non-mainstream researchers who argue for dramatically older construction dates or non-standard interpretations, while mains
M_5_09 — Denisova Cave: Archaeological Wonders and Genetic Revelations
Denisova Cave (Денисова пещера), located in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia, Russia, is one of the most extraordinary archaeological sites in the world — the only known location where three distinct hominin speci
M_5_14 — Archaeological Dating Method Controversies
Archaeological chronology — the backbone of all historical interpretation — rests on a hierarchy of dating methods, each with specific strengths, limitations, and known failure modes that are well documented in the speci
M_5_12 — Replication Archaeology & Experimental Reconstruction
Replication archaeology — the systematic reconstruction and testing of ancient technologies, tools, structures, and processes under controlled or field conditions — represents one of experimental archaeology's most produ
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_14 — Construction Replication Experiments and Megalithic Engineering Tests
Construction replication experiments — attempts to reproduce ancient building techniques using period-appropriate tools and methods — provide the most direct empirical test of whether proposed explanations for megalithic
M_3_15 — Construction Replication Experiments: Testing Ancient Building Methods
Construction replication experiments — attempts to reproduce ancient building techniques using only tools and methods available in the relevant period — provide the strongest empirical test of whether "impossible" ancien
M_3_08 — Ancient Precision Drilling — Core #7 and Petrie's Evidence
Among the most debated artifacts in discussions of ancient technology are granite drill cores and bore holes from ancient Egypt, particularly a piece catalogued as "Core #7" — a cylindrical granite core (approximately 10
M_3_12 — Stone Softening Claims: Mythological and Chemical Analysis
Among the most intriguing and elusive claims in alternative archaeology is the idea that ancient Andean peoples possessed a botanical or chemical method of "softening" stone — reducing hard stone (particularly the andesi
M_3_04 — Ancient Mining and Tunneling Technology
Ancient mining and tunneling represent some of humanity's most technically demanding and dangerous engineering achievements, dating from Paleolithic flint mines (Grimes Graves, England, c. 3000 BCE; Spiennes, Belgium, c.
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_06 — Unfinished Obelisk and Ancient Quarrying Evidence
The Unfinished Obelisk at the Northern Quarry of Aswan, Egypt is one of the most important archaeological sites for understanding ancient Egyptian stone-quarrying technology. Dated to the New Kingdom (most likely commiss
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