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93 results for "migration" — page 3 of 5

A_3_06 Verified Foundations

A_3_06 — Orphic Hymns, Tablets, and the Orphic Tradition

The Orphic tradition represents one of the most influential yet enigmatic religious movements of the ancient Greek world, centered on the mythical poet-musician Orpheus, who was believed to have descended to the underwor

Orphism Orphic hymns Orphic tablets gold tablets Orpheus Dionysus
W_4_21 Verified World Civilizations

W_4_21 — Rapa Nui: Isolation, Ecocide Debate, and Cultural Resilience on Easter Island

Rapa Nui (Easter Island), the most isolated inhabited island in the world — 3,700 km from South America, 2,000 km from Pitcairn — was settled by Polynesian voyagers c. 1200 CE and developed a unique civilization that car

rapa nui easter island moai rongorongo polynesian ecocide
W_4_02 World Civilizations

W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui

The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of

Polynesia Polynesian navigation star compass wayfinding Rapa Nui Easter Island
W_4_15 Credible World Civilizations

W_4_15 — Ancestral Puebloan: Chaco Canyon, Mesa Verde, and Cliff Dwellings

The Ancestral Puebloan peoples (formerly "Anasazi" — a Navajo term meaning "ancient ones" or "ancient enemies," now considered disrespectful by many Puebloan descendants) developed one of the most architecturally and ast

Ancestral Puebloan Anasazi Chaco Canyon Mesa Verde cliff dwellings kiva
W_1_03 World Civilizations

W_1_03 — Harappan / Indus Valley Civilization — Mohenjo-daro, Undeciphered Script, and the Pashupati Seal

The Indus Valley / Harappan Civilization (c. 3300–1300 BCE, mature phase 2600–1900 BCE) was the largest of the three great Bronze Age civilizations — at its peak covering ~1.25 million km², with an estimated population o

Harappan Indus Valley Mohenjo-daro Harappa Indus script undeciphered
W_2_20 Credible World Civilizations

W_2_20 — Vedic Civilizations

The Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE) represents the formative era of Indian civilization, encompassing the composition of the Rig Veda (the oldest surviving Indo-European literary text), the development of the fire sacrifi

Vedic period Rig Veda Aryan migration Indo-European soma agni
W_5_02 World Civilizations

W_5_02 — Celtic and Druidic Traditions

The Celtic peoples — a linguistic and cultural group spread across Europe from Anatolia to Ireland between roughly 800 BCE and 400 CE — developed one of the most sophisticated pre-literate knowledge systems in the Wester

Celtic Druid Druidism Druidry ogham sacred grove
W_5_12 Credible World Civilizations

W_5_12 — Lapita Culture: Pacific Colonization and Pottery Horizon

The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1600/1500–500 BCE) was the foundational maritime culture that colonized Remote Oceania — transforming the Pacific from a barrier into a highway and ultimately giving rise to the Polynesian

Lapita Pacific Oceania colonization pottery Melanesia
ZF_2_16 Credible Oceanography

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

mesopelagic zone twilight zone biological carbon pump diel vertical migration myctophidae bioluminescence
ZF_2_05 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_05 — Whale Biology and Cetacean Communication

Cetaceans — the order comprising whales, dolphins, and porpoises (~90 living species) — are among the most cognitively sophisticated and communicatively complex animals on Earth. Evolved from terrestrial artiodactyls tha

cetacean whale dolphin echolocation whale song humpback
ZF_1_18 Verified Oceanography

ZF_1_18 — Mesopelagic Zone Ecology

The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is emerging as one of the most ecologically and biogeochemically important yet poorly understood habitats on Earth. [KEY FINDING] Despite receiving

mesopelagic twilight-zone diel-vertical-migration biological-carbon-pump deep-scattering-layer micronekton
E_3_07 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_3_07 — Late Bronze Age Collapse

The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) was one of the most dramatic civilizational catastrophes in human history — a cascade of destructions, abandonments, and systemic failures that ended the interconnected pal

Late Bronze Age collapse 1200 BCE Sea Peoples Bronze Age Hittite Mycenaean
E_3_21 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_3_21 — The 5.9 Kiloyear Event: Saharan Desiccation & the Birth of River Civilizations

The 5.9 kiloyear event (c. 3900 BCE) marks the terminal phase of the African Humid Period — a 6,000-year interval during which the Sahara was a grassland savanna supporting abundant lakes, rivers, and human populations.

5900-year-event green-sahara african-humid-period saharan-desiccation neolithic-subpluvial orbital-forcing
E_3_03 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_3_03 — Ice Age Civilizations — Evidence for Complexity During the Last Glacial Maximum

The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ~26,500-19,000 BP) — when ice sheets covered ~32% of the global land surface and sea levels dropped ~120 meters below present — was not a period of human stagnation but of remarkable cultur

Ice Age Last Glacial Maximum LGM Paleolithic Upper Paleolithic Younger Dryas
E_2_19 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_19 — Volcanism and Human Evolution: Eruptions That Shaped Our Species

The relationship between volcanism and human evolution operates on multiple scales and through multiple mechanisms — from the geological forces that created the landscapes where hominins evolved, to the catastrophic erup

volcanism human evolution Toba volcanic winter bottleneck tephra
E_2_01 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_01 — 536 CE Climate Catastrophe

This document examines 536 CE Climate Catastrophe, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include "The Worst Year to Be Alive", Historical Eyewitness Accounts, The Volcanic

536 CE Fimbulvetr Ragnarök volcanic winter Ilopango Procopius
Q_3_08 Verified Cosmology & Physics

Q_3_08 — Planetary Formation and Protoplanetary Disks

Planets form within protoplanetary disks — rotationally supported structures of gas and dust orbiting newly formed stars, with typical masses of 0.1–10% of the stellar mass, radii of 10–1000 AU, and lifetimes of ~1–10 mi

protoplanetary disk planet formation core accretion disk instability planetesimal pebble accretion
Verified

INTERDOC_13 — Out of Africa vs. Multiregional: The Synthesis That Changed Everything

The two dominant models of human origins battled from the 1980s through the 2010s. Chris Stringer and Peter Andrews championed the Recent African Origin (RAO) model (1988, Science): anatomically modern humans evolved exc

out of Africa multiregional recent African origin Homo sapiens dispersal admixture
ZB_5_09 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_09 — Phenology: Seasonal Timing in Nature

Phenology — the study of the timing of recurring biological events (leaf-out, flowering, fruiting, autumn senescence, insect emergence, bird migration, amphibian breeding) in relation to seasonal and climatic drivers — h

phenology seasonal timing climate change mismatch first bloom migration timing
ZB_5_01 Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_01 — Biological Rhythms Beyond Circadian

While circadian (~24-hour) rhythms are the best-studied biological oscillations (2017 Nobel Prize to Hall, Rosbash, Young), life is permeated by rhythms operating across all timescales — from millisecond neural oscillati

biological rhythms ultradian rhythms infradian rhythms circannual rhythms tidal rhythms lunar rhythms