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2,499 results for "La Niña" — page 3 of 125
C_4_19 — The Labyrinth as Ritual Pathway: From Knossos to Chartres
The labyrinth — a single-path (unicursal) design leading to a center and back — is one of humanity's most persistent geometric-symbolic forms, appearing across at least 4,000 years and five continents. Distinct from the
C_5_27 — Labyrinth Mythology: From Knossos to Sacred Geometry
The labyrinth — a unicursal or multicursal path winding toward a center — is one of the most ancient and globally distributed symbols. The most famous is the Labyrinth of Knossos (Crete), traditionally built by Daedalus
C_5_15 — Ethnobotany and Sacred Plant Knowledge Across Cultures
Ethnobotany — the study of relationships between peoples and plants — reveals that virtually every human culture has identified, cultivated, and ritualized psychoactive, medicinal, and sacred plants. Richard Evans Schult
ZF_2_16 — Mesopelagic Twilight Zone Ecology
The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is the largest and least understood habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 1–10 billion tonnes of fish biomass, hosting the largest animal migra
ZF_3_08 — Sunda Shelf and Southeast Asian Submerged Landscapes
The Sunda Shelf (or Sundaland) is one of Earth's largest continental shelves — an area of ~1.8 million km² (larger than the Indian subcontinent) that connects the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and Bali to peninsular
ZF_3_18 — Microplastic Pollution in the Ocean
Microplastics — plastic particles <5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean, present from surface waters to the deepest hadal trenches, from Arctic sea ice to
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZF_4_11 — Sea Ice Dynamics and Polar Oceanography
Sea ice — frozen seawater that forms a thin crust (typically 1–4 m thick) over polar and subpolar oceans — is one of Earth's most dynamic and climate-sensitive features, playing a disproportionate role in global climate
ZF_4_18 — Deep Ocean Microplastics
Deep ocean microplastics — synthetic polymer particles smaller than 5 mm that have infiltrated the deepest marine environments on Earth — represent one of the most alarming and poorly understood dimensions of global plas
ZF_4_16 — Microplastics in the Ocean: Sources, Pathways, and Ecological Impact
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean. First systematically described as a marine pollutant by Richard Thomp
ZF_1_08 — Submarine Volcanism and Island Formation
Submarine volcanism — volcanic activity occurring beneath the ocean surface — accounts for approximately 75% of the Earth's total volcanic output and is the primary mechanism by which new oceanic crust is created, island
ZF_1_19 — AMOC Collapse Risk
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) — a system of ocean currents carrying warm surface water northward through the Atlantic and returning cold, dense water at depth — is one of Earth's most critical cl
Z_5_13 — Molecular Clocks: Timing Evolution at the Sequence Level
Molecular clocks — the observation that DNA and protein sequences accumulate substitutions (mutations that become fixed in a lineage) at approximately regular rates over long periods of evolutionary time, enabling the es
Z_5_06 — Circulating Cell-Free DNA: Liquid Biopsies and Non-Invasive Diagnostics
Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) — fragments of DNA released into the bloodstream and other body fluids through cell death (apoptosis, necrosis), active secretion, and other mechanisms — has emerged as a revolutionary t
Z_2_19 — Senolytics & Geroscience: Targeting Cellular Senescence in Aging
Cellular senescence — the irreversible arrest of cell division first described by Leonard Hayflick and Paul Moorhead (1961, Experimental Cell Research) — has emerged as a central mechanism of aging and age-related diseas
Z_1_19 — Non-Coding RNA and Gene Regulation
Non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) — RNA molecules that are transcribed from the genome but do not encode proteins — have emerged as central regulators of gene expression, challenging the classical "one gene–one protein" paradigm
Z_4_08 — The Ribosome: The Molecular Machine of Translation
The ribosome — the massive molecular machine responsible for translating the genetic information encoded in messenger RNA (mRNA) into functional proteins — is arguably the most important macromolecular complex in all of
Z_4_13 — Membrane Biology: Lipid Bilayers, Rafts, and Cellular Boundaries
Biological membranes — the lipid bilayer structures that define cells and compartmentalize their interiors — are fundamental to all life on Earth. Every cell is bounded by a plasma membrane that separates the interior (c
Z_4_17 — Non-coding RNA Networks: Regulation Beyond the Genome
Non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) — RNA molecules that are not translated into protein but perform functional roles in the cell — have emerged since the late 1990s as a vast and previously unsuspected layer of biological regulati
Z_4_06 — Psychedelic Neurochemistry: 5-HT2A, Tryptamines, and Molecular Mechanisms
Psychedelic neurochemistry — the molecular-level study of how psychedelic compounds alter brain function to produce their characteristic effects (visual hallucinations, synesthesia, ego dissolution, mystical-type experie
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