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2,234 results for "El Niño" — page 34 of 112
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_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_28 — Japanese Archaeology: Jōmon Culture and Ancient Japan
The Jōmon period (c. 14,000–300 BCE) represents one of the longest continuous cultural traditions in human history and challenges standard models of social evolution. The Jōmon produced the world's oldest known pottery (
M_5_23 — Post-Glacial Flooding and Submerged Archaeological Landscapes
Between the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, c. 26,500–19,000 years ago) and approximately 6,000 years ago, global mean sea level rose by approximately 120–130 m, drowning continental shelves that had been habitable land. The
M_5_29 — Optically Stimulated Luminescence Dating: Principles, Applications, and Archaeological Impact
Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating measures the time elapsed since mineral grains (primarily quartz and feldspar) were last exposed to sunlight or heat, making it one of the most important absolute dating met
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_01 — Impossible Precision in Ancient Construction
The Great Pyramid of Giza and Andean polygonal masonry demonstrate engineering precision that is VERIFIED, MEASURABLE, and often difficult to explain with proposed tool kits. These are not fringe claims — they are survey
M_3_03 — Archaeoacoustics and Acoustic Properties of Ancient Structures
Archaeoacoustics is the study of the acoustic properties of ancient structures, investigating whether builders intentionally designed ritual, ceremonial, and sacred spaces to produce specific sound effects — resonance, e
M_4_01 — Suppressed Archaeological Discoveries
The concept of "suppressed archaeology" requires careful separation of (1) genuine academic conservatism that slows acceptance of new paradigms (real and documented), (2) documented cases of destruction/loss of archaeolo
M_4_07 — Ancient Nuclear War Theory — Mohenjo-daro and the Mahabharata
The ancient nuclear war theory proposes that advanced civilizations possessed nuclear or comparable weapons of mass destruction thousands of years ago, citing the Mahabharata's descriptions of devastating "brahmastra" we
M_4_03 — Archaeological Dating Disputes and Controversies
Archaeological dating methods — the techniques used to determine the age of artifacts, structures, and deposits — are the backbone of all claims about the human past. Radiocarbon dating (carbon-14 analysis, developed by
M_4_06 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar 43 — Comet Impact Encoding and the Vulture Stone
Pillar 43, also known as the "Vulture Stone," is one of the most elaborately carved pillars at Göbekli Tepe, located in Enclosure D of this 11,000+ year-old monumental site in southeastern Turkey. The pillar is carved wi
M_4_11 — Göbekli Tepe Climate Reconstruction: What Supported Its Builders?
Göbekli Tepe (~9600-8000 BCE), the monumental stone pillar sanctuary in southeastern Turkey, presents a fundamental puzzle: how did pre-agricultural hunter-gatherers — people who had not yet domesticated crops or animals
M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes
This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo
M_4_10 — Giants in the Archaeological Record: Separating Fact from Fiction
Claims of giant human skeletons — remains of individuals standing 7, 8, 10, or even 30+ feet tall — are among the most persistent themes in alternative archaeology, appearing in 19th-century newspaper accounts, religious
M_4_15 — The Richat Structure and the Atlantis Hypothesis
The Richat Structure (Guelb er Richat, "Eye of the Sahara") is a prominent ~40-km-diameter circular geological formation in the Adrar Plateau of Mauritania (21.13°N, 11.40°W). Its concentric ring pattern — visible from s
M_2_13 — Nan Madol — Pacific Megalithic Mystery
Nan Madol — a complex of 92 artificial islets built on a coral reef flat off the southeastern shore of Pohnpei (Federated States of Micronesia) — is the only ancient city in the world built entirely on water, and one of
M_2_08 — Underwater Structures of Lake Titicaca & Japan
Multiple significant underwater stone formations have been documented in two distant but thematically related regions: Lake Titicaca (Bolivia/Peru) and the waters surrounding the southern Japanese Ryukyu Islands.
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