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728 results for "precessional age" — page 32 of 37
S_3_14 — Agricultural Robotics: Precision Farming and Automated Harvest
Agricultural robotics and precision farming — the application of robotics, sensors, GPS, AI, and data analytics to optimize agricultural production — are transforming food production in response to growing demand (global
S_3_06 — Renewable Energy Transformation
The renewable energy transformation is the most rapid energy technology transition in history. Solar photovoltaics (PV): the cost of solar PV has fallen ~99% since 1976 and ~90% since 2010, following Swanson's Law (the p
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_05 — Smart Cities and Urban Technology
Smart cities integrate digital technology, sensors, and data analytics into urban infrastructure to improve efficiency, sustainability, and quality of life. The concept gained momentum in the 2010s, driven by corporate i
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_11 — Bioinformatics: Computational Genomics and Drug Discovery
Bioinformatics — the application of computational methods to biological data — has become indispensable to modern biology and medicine, driven by the exponential growth of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolo
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_10 — Gene Drives: Ecosystem Engineering and Extinction Technology
Gene drives are genetic engineering systems that bias inheritance in sexually reproducing organisms, causing a modified gene to spread through a wild population at rates far exceeding normal Mendelian inheritance (which
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_19 — Irish Monks in America: The Brendan Voyage and Pre-Columbian North Atlantic Contacts
The hypothesis that Irish monks reached Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and possibly North America before the Norse has a foundation in medieval literary, place-name, and archaeological evidence, though the most ambitious cl
F_1_09 — Austronesian Expansion: The Greatest Maritime Migration
The Austronesian expansion is the most extensive pre-modern maritime migration in human history, covering over half the globe — from Taiwan to Madagascar, Easter Island, Hawaii, and New Zealand — over approximately 5,000
F_2_08 — Lapis Lazuli Trade Networks
Lapis lazuli — a deep-blue metamorphic rock composed primarily of lazurite — is one of the oldest traded luxury materials in human history, with its distribution across the ancient world providing direct evidence of long
F_2_13 — Copper Trade Networks: Great Lakes to Mediterranean
The Great Lakes copper deposits — particularly the vast deposits of native (naturally pure) copper on the Keweenaw Peninsula and Isle Royale of Michigan's Upper Peninsula — represent one of the world's most remarkable mi
F_4_22 — Ancient Road Systems: Persian Royal Road, Roman Via, Inca Qhapaq Ñan
The construction of engineered road systems represents one of the most transformative infrastructure achievements of ancient civilizations — and three empires produced road networks that, for their era, were unmatched in
F_4_15 — Bell Beaker Phenomenon and European Transformation
The Bell Beaker phenomenon (c. 2750–1800 BCE) is one of the most geographically extensive and archaeologically debated cultural manifestations of European prehistory. Named after the distinctive bell-shaped drinking vess
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_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_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
F_4_20 — Yamnaya Expansion: Steppe Herders and Indo-European Spread
The Yamnaya culture (c. 3300–2600 BCE) — a semi-nomadic pastoral society of the Pontic-Caspian steppe (modern Ukraine, southern Russia, and western Kazakhstan) — has emerged from ancient DNA studies as one of the most co
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
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