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601 results for "tandem MS" — page 4 of 31
E_2_23 — Bronze Age Collapse Synthesis: Multi-Causal Analysis c. 1200 BCE
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational discontinuities: within approximately 50 years, the interconnected palace economies of the Mycenaean kingdoms, the
E_4_03 — Paleomagnetism & Geomagnetic Excursions
Earth's magnetic field periodically undergoes dramatic excursions and full polarity reversals, with profound physical consequences including weakened radiation shielding, increased UV exposure, and ozone depletion. The L
E_4_09 — Magnetic Pole Reversals and the Laschamp Event
Earth's magnetic field periodically undergoes geomagnetic reversals — events in which the north and south magnetic poles swap polarity. This has occurred at least 183 times in the last 83 million years, with the last ful
E_4_16 — Cosmogenic Isotope Dating: Beryllium-10 and Exposure Ages
Cosmogenic nuclide dating (also called cosmogenic exposure dating or terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide, TCN, dating) is a geochronological method that determines how long a rock surface has been exposed at or near Earth's s
ZG_1_07 — Mayan Glyphs — Decipherment and Historical Linguistics
The Maya script — the only Mesoamerican writing system known to fully represent spoken language — is a logosyllabic system combining ~800 distinct signs (logograms for words, syllabograms for syllables, and determinative
INTERDOC_57 — Cascade Pattern Across Civilization Resets
Three civilization-altering events — the Younger Dryas climate reversal (c. 12,800 years ago), the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1177 BCE), and the Justinianic Plague (541–549 CE and centuries of recurrence) — share struc
ZB_5_29 — Biomineralization: Biological Crystal Engineering from Shells to Bones
Biomineralization — the process by which living organisms produce minerals — is one of the most remarkable achievements of biological engineering, responsible for structures ranging from the calcium carbonate shells of m
G_4_10 — Paleoclimatology Methods: Proxies, Models, and Reconstruction
Paleoclimatology reconstructs Earth's climate history using natural archives—physical, chemical, and biological proxies preserved in geological and biological materials. Speleothems (cave formations) record precipitation
G_3_16 — Complexity Theory and Civilizational Collapse
Complexity theory — drawn from physics, mathematics, ecology, and information theory — provides a powerful framework for understanding why civilizations collapse: not as the result of a single catastrophic event, but as
ZD_3_20 — Edge Computing
Edge computing is a distributed computing paradigm that brings computation and data storage closer to the sources of data — at or near the "edge" of the network — rather than relying on a centralized data center. The con
ZD_3_13 — Cloud Computing: Virtualization, Services, and Distributed Infrastructure
Cloud computing is the delivery of computing resources — servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics, and intelligence — over the Internet ("the cloud") on a pay-as-you-go basis, transforming computing f
ZD_5_18 — Complexity Science: The Santa Fe Institute and the Science of Emergence
Complexity science — the interdisciplinary study of systems composed of many interacting components whose collective behavior cannot be predicted from individual parts — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s, catalyze
ZD_5_19 — Stochastic Resonance: When Noise Enhances Signal
Stochastic resonance (SR) is the counterintuitive phenomenon whereby adding noise to a nonlinear system enhances its ability to detect weak signals — directly contradicting the classical engineering intuition that noise
ZD_4_14 — Computational Social Science: Agent-Based Modeling, Digital Trace Data, and Social Simulation
Computational social science (CSS) is the interdisciplinary field that applies computational methods — agent-based modeling, social network analysis, natural language processing, machine learning, simulation, and large-s
H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?
The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de
N_4_16 — Club of Rome & Limits to Growth
The Club of Rome is an international think tank founded on April 8, 1968, in Rome, by Aurelio Peccei (1908–1984), an Italian industrialist (former managing director of Fiat and co-founder of Olivetti), and Alexander King
S_4_03 — Nuclear War and Civilizational Risk
Nuclear war remains one of the most acute existential threats to human civilization, with approximately 12,500 warheads in global arsenals as of 2024 and the Doomsday Clock at a historic 90 seconds to midnight. Peer-revi
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
F_3_05 — Writing System Origins and Independent Inventions
Writing was independently invented at least four times in human history: Sumerian cuneiform in Mesopotamia (~3400 BCE), Egyptian hieroglyphs (~3200 BCE), Chinese script (~1200 BCE with possible earlier precursors), and M
ZA_5_09 — Quantum Simulation: Programming Nature to Model Nature
Quantum simulation — using one controllable quantum system to emulate the behavior of another, less tractable quantum system — was proposed by Richard Feynman in 1982 as a natural solution to the fundamental difficulty o
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