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E_3_22 — Historic Mega-Earthquakes: Cascadia, New Madrid, and the Seismic Record
The seismic record of North America reveals two mega-earthquake systems that challenge the common assumption that destructive earthquakes are confined to well-known plate boundaries like the San Andreas Fault: the Cascad
E_3_02 — Catastrophic Flood Geomorphology
Earth's surface preserves dramatic evidence of catastrophic floods on a scale unimaginable today. The Channeled Scablands of Washington State were carved by the Missoula Floods (~13,000–15,000 BP): glacial Lake Missoula
E_2_17 — Campanian Ignimbrite: 40,000 BP European Super-Eruption
The Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) eruption — also known as the CI super-eruption — was the largest volcanic event in the Mediterranean region during the past 200,000 years and one of the largest explosive eruptions in the La
E_2_08 — Little Ice Age — Climate, Society, and the Modern World
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a prolonged period of climatic cooling that affected much of the Northern Hemisphere from approximately 1300 to 1850 CE, with coldest intervals during the Maunder Minimum (1645–1715) and the
E_2_12 — Great Oxygenation Event
The Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) — approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago — was one of the most transformative events in Earth's history: the first permanent rise of free molecular oxygen (O₂) in the atmosphere, from n
E_2_19 — Volcanism and Human Evolution: Eruptions That Shaped Our Species
The relationship between volcanism and human evolution operates on multiple scales and through multiple mechanisms — from the geological forces that created the landscapes where hominins evolved, to the catastrophic erup
E_2_24 — The Bronze Age Collapse: Multi-Causal Catastrophe of 1177 BCE
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (~1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational disruptions, witnessing the destruction or severe decline of virtually every major eastern Mediterranean civilization
E_2_10 — Volcanic Winter and Civilizational Effects
Large volcanic eruptions can inject sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere, where they reflect incoming solar radiation, producing global cooling lasting 1–3 years — a phenomenon known as volcanic winter. The most severe
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_21 — Oxygen Isotope Stages: Marine Isotope Record and Climate Cycles
The marine oxygen isotope record — constructed from measurements of the ratio of oxygen-18 to oxygen-16 (δ¹⁸O) in the calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) shells of foraminifera (single-celled marine organisms) preserved in deep-se
E_4_05 — Cyclical Destruction and Renewal
Nearly every human civilization has independently conceived of time not as a single arrow but as a wheel — creation, flourishing, decay, destruction, and rebirth cycling endlessly. The Hindu yuga system maps a 4.32-billi
E_4_02 — Radiocarbon Calibration & Chronology Shifts
This document examines Radiocarbon Calibration & Chronology Shifts, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include The Physics , Key Parameters, What Can Be Dated. Notable
E_4_22 — Varve Chronology: Annual Lake Sediment Records
Varve chronology is a dating and paleoclimate method based on counting and analyzing varves — annually laminated sediment layers deposited in lakes (and occasionally in marine or estuarine settings). Each varve typically
E_4_14 — Stratigraphic Methods and Geological Timekeeping
Stratigraphy — the study of rock layers (strata) and their sequential relationships — is the foundational framework for understanding geological time and establishing the chronology of Earth's 4.54-billion-year history.
E_1_11 — Comet Encke and the Taurid Complex: Recurring Cosmic Threat
Comet 2P/Encke — a short-period comet with the shortest known orbital period of any bright comet (3.3 years) — is the most prominent surviving fragment of a much larger cometary body whose progressive disintegration over
E_1_05 — The Hollow Moon: Evidence, Anomalies & Theories
This document examines The Hollow Moon: Evidence, Anomalies & Theories, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include Apollo Seismic "Ringing Like a Bell", Anomalous Densi
E_1_07 — Tunguska Event and Modern Impact Evidence
On June 30, 1908, an atmospheric explosion over the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in central Siberia released energy equivalent to approximately 12 megatons of TNT (roughly 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb), flattening 2,150
E_1_06 — Chicxulub Impact and the K-Pg Boundary
Approximately 66 million years ago, at the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods (K-Pg boundary, formerly K-T boundary), a ~10 km diameter asteroid struck what is now the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, crea
E_5_01 — Bronze Age Collapse: A Detailed Systems Analysis
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) was one of history's most devastating civilizational catastrophes — a cascading multi-system failure that destroyed or severely diminished virtually every major palace-base
E_5_06 — Holocene Sixth Mass Extinction: Current Biodiversity Crisis
The Holocene "Sixth Mass Extinction" hypothesis holds that current species loss rates are 100–1,000 times the normal background extinction rate, driven primarily by human activity: habitat destruction, overexploitation,
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