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77 results for "collapse cascade" — page 4 of 4
R_5_02 — Megafauna Extinction: Quaternary Losses and the Overkill Debate
Between ~50,000 and 10,000 years ago, Earth lost the majority of its large-bodied animals (megafauna >44 kg) — woolly mammoths, ground sloths, saber-toothed cats, giant wombats, moa, and dozens of other spectacular speci
R_5_04 — Eusociality: Ants, Bees, and Termites
Eusociality — the highest level of social organization in the animal kingdom, characterized by reproductive division of labor (some individuals forgo reproduction to help others reproduce), cooperative brood care, and ov
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
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
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
F_2_01 — Bronze Age Trade Networks
Bronze Age trade networks provide a documented, testable middle ground between independent invention and lost-civilization contact as explanations for shared cultural motifs across the ancient world. If tin from Cornwall
F_3_10 — Plague and Disease Transmission Along Trade Routes
The same trade routes and migration corridors that connected distant civilizations also served as highways for pandemic disease, making pathogen transmission one of the most consequential — and devastating — forms of "lo
ZA_1_17 — Alternative Quantum Interpretations: Bohm, Many-Worlds, and Beyond Copenhagen
The interpretation of quantum mechanics — the question of what the mathematical formalism of quantum theory tells us about the nature of reality — remains one of the most profound and contested problems in the philosophy
ZA_1_16 — Sonoluminescence: Light from Sound and the Mystery of Collapsing Bubbles
Sonoluminescence is the emission of short bursts of light from gas bubbles in a liquid when excited by ultrasonic sound waves. First observed by H. Frenzel and H. Schultes at the University of Cologne in 1934 (multi-bubb
ZA_1_14 — The Measurement Problem: Quantum Mechanics' Deepest Puzzle
The measurement problem — arguably the deepest conceptual issue in all of physics — arises from a fundamental tension within quantum mechanics between two processes: (1) unitary evolution — the deterministic, continuous,
ZA_1_05 — Quantum Decoherence and the Measurement Problem
Quantum decoherence explains how the strange superposition behavior of quantum mechanics transitions into the definite, classical-looking world we observe — without requiring a mysterious "collapse" postulate. When a qua
ZA_3_11 — Cosmic Ray Physics and Ultra-High-Energy Particles
Cosmic rays — high-energy particles (primarily protons, alpha particles, and heavier atomic nuclei, with a small fraction of electrons and antimatter) that bombard Earth from space — were discovered by Victor Hess in 191
INTERDOC_73 — Cancer as Informational Coherence Collapse
[KEY FINDING] By isolating the progression of cancer across four distinct levels of biological organization, we find that tumorigenesis is universally preceded by a loss of systemic coherence.
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
E_2_03 — Santorini/Thera Eruption and Minoan Collapse
Around 1600 BCE (revised range: 1628–1600 BCE), the volcanic island of Thera (modern Santorini) in the southern Aegean Sea experienced one of the largest volcanic eruptions in recorded human history — a VEI-7 event that
E_3_11 — Earthquake Archaeology and Seismic Catastrophes
Archaeoseismology — the study of past earthquakes using archaeological evidence — reveals that seismic catastrophes have repeatedly destroyed, reshaped, and sometimes permanently ended ancient urban centers and entire ci
E_3_00 — Geological Hydrological Events: Subfolder Summary
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