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79 results for "Younger Dryas impact" — page 4 of 4
O_3_05 — Rivers as Arteries — Freshwater Systems and Sacred Hydrology
Rivers have served as the circulatory system of human civilization since the earliest settlements along the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, and Yellow River valleys. Across virtually every culture, rivers are not merely r
D_3_01 — Serpent Mound & Effigy Mounds
The Great Serpent Mound in Adams County, Ohio is the largest surviving effigy mound in the world at 1,348 feet (411 m), depicting a sinuous serpent with seven undulating curves and an egg-shaped feature at its head. It c
H_2_12 — Peer Review: History, Flaws, and Gatekeeping Function
Peer review — the evaluation of scientific manuscripts by expert reviewers before publication — is the primary mechanism by which the scientific community certifies knowledge claims as meeting disciplinary standards of e
R_1_03 — Mass Extinction Events
Life on Earth has endured at least five catastrophic mass extinctions in 540 million years, each eliminating 60–96% of all species. The "Big Five" are: End-Ordovician (~443 Mya, ~85% species lost), Late Devonian (~372 My
R_1_18 — Mass Extinction Periodicity
The question of whether mass extinctions follow a periodic pattern — recurring at regular intervals driven by astronomical or geological cycles — has been one of the most provocative and contentious hypotheses in paleont
S_4_05 — Asteroid Deflection and Planetary Defense
Asteroid and comet impacts represent the only existential risk with a proven extinction track record — the Chicxulub impact 66 million years ago ended the Cretaceous and eliminated ~75% of species including non-avian din
S_4_01 — Existential Risk Taxonomy
Existential risk (x-risk) refers to any event that could permanently curtail humanity's long-term potential — including extinction, civilizational collapse without recovery, or irreversible loss of value (e.g., permanent
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
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_12 — El Niño and ENSO: Pacific Oscillation and Global Climate Impact
The El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the most powerful year-to-year climate fluctuation on Earth — a coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon centered in the tropical Pacific that affects weather patterns, agriculture,
E_3_12 — Agriculture: Origins, Spread, and Civilizational Impact
Agriculture — the deliberate cultivation of plants and domestication of animals for food, fiber, and other products — is arguably the single most consequential technological and social transformation in human history, se
E_1_08 — Ancient Supernovae and Their Cultural Impact
Supernovae — the explosive deaths of massive stars — are among the most energetic events in the universe, capable of briefly outshining entire galaxies. When they occur within our galaxy at distances of a few thousand li
S_1_16 — Large Language Models: Architecture, Capabilities, and Societal Impact
Large Language Models (LLMs) are neural networks with billions to trillions of parameters, trained on massive text corpora to predict the next token in a sequence. Built on the transformer architecture introduced by Vasw
I_5_03 — Ancient Astronaut Theory — Evidence, Critique, and Cultural Impact
The Ancient Astronaut Theory (AAT) — also called paleocontact hypothesis — proposes that extraterrestrial beings visited Earth in antiquity and influenced human civilization, religion, technology, and/or biology. Popular
ZH_4_06 — Comets and Meteors in Cultural History: Omens to Science
Throughout human history, comets — with their dramatic, unpredictable appearances and luminous tails stretching across the sky — have been among the most powerful celestial omens, inspiring fear, wonder, and interpretive
ZF_4_17 — Anthropogenic Ocean Noise: Acoustic Pollution and Marine Life
Anthropogenic ocean noise — the introduction of human-generated sound into the marine environment — has increased dramatically since the mid-20th century, transforming the ocean soundscape from one dominated by biologica
E_1_16 — Thera/Santorini Eruption: Detailed Analysis of the Minoan Catastrophe
The eruption of Thera (modern Santorini, Greece) was one of the largest volcanic events in the Holocene — estimated at VEI 6–7 (Volcanic Explosivity Index), ejecting approximately 30–80 km³ of magma (dense rock equivalen
E_1_17 — Toba Supereruption: Genetic Bottleneck and Climate Catastrophe
The Toba supereruption — occurring approximately 74,000 years ago (74 ka) on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia — was the largest volcanic eruption of the last 2 million years and one of the most catastrophic events in hum
Ocean_Climate_Civilization_Nexus
The relationship between ocean systems and human civilization is one of the most consequential and least integrated topics in historical analysis — most conventional histories treat the ocean as a static background, when
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