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152 results for "Aswan High Dam" — page 5 of 8
O_1_20 — Schumann Resonance
The Schumann resonances are a set of spectral peaks in the extremely low frequency (ELF) portion of the Earth's electromagnetic field spectrum, generated by lightning discharges exciting the resonant cavity formed betwee
O_4_10 — Megafloods: Missoula, Altai, and Catastrophic Hydrology
Megafloods — catastrophic, high-discharge flooding events far exceeding any observed in historical times — have repeatedly reshaped Earth's surface, carving immense channels, depositing giant ripple marks and boulders, a
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
T_4_12 — Radicalization: Pathways to Extremism, Terrorism, and Deradicalization
Radicalization — the process by which individuals adopt increasingly extreme political, social, or religious ideologies that justify violence as a means of achieving group or personal goals — has become one of the most i
T_4_16 — Impostor Phenomenon & Self-Doubt Psychology
The impostor phenomenon (IP) describes the internal experience of believing that one's achievements are undeserved and that one will eventually be exposed as a fraud, despite objective evidence of competence. First descr
T_1_07 — Emotion Theory and Affect
Emotion theory addresses one of psychology's most fundamental and contested questions: What are emotions, where do they come from, and how many are there?
T_5_09 — Narrative Psychology: Story, Identity, and the Storied Self
Narrative psychology — the study of how humans make sense of their lives, construct identity, and organize experience through storytelling — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s–1990s through the work of Jerome Brune
T_5_04 — Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
The psychology of religion investigates why humans believe in supernatural agents, how religious practices affect cognition and well-being, and what psychological functions religion serves. The field was inaugurated by W
D_1_10 — Petra — Rock-Cut Architecture and Hydrological Engineering
Petra, the ancient Nabataean capital hidden within the sandstone mountains of southern Jordan, represents one of the most extraordinary achievements in rock-cut architecture. Established as the Nabataean capital by the 4
D_3_22 — Great Serpent Mound: Astronomical Analysis and Cultural Context
The Great Serpent Mound is a 411-meter-long (1,348 ft) serpentine effigy earthwork in Adams County, Ohio, situated on a plateau overlooking Brush Creek — the largest surviving effigy mound in the world. The mound takes t
D_3_14 — Rock-Hewn Churches of Tigray: Beyond Lalibela
While Lalibela's eleven rock-hewn churches are world-famous, a far more extensive but less-known tradition of rock-cut church architecture extends across the Tigray Region of northern Ethiopia (and neighboring Eritrea) —
B_5_11 — Plant Spirits and Green Man: Vegetation Entities Worldwide
Plant spirits and vegetation entities — supernatural beings inhabiting, embodying, or governing plant life — represent one of the oldest layers of religious thought, reflecting humanity's absolute dependence on the veget
B_2_10 — Vampiric Entities Across Cultures
The concept of a predatory undead or supernatural being that sustains itself by draining life force — blood, breath, sexual energy, or vital essence — from the living appears independently across nearly every major cultu
ZD_1_08 — Lambda Calculus and Functional Programming
Lambda calculus, invented by Alonzo Church in the 1930s as a formal system for expressing computation via function abstraction and application, stands alongside Turing machines as a foundational model of computation. Chu
L_1_18 — Human Migration: Out of Africa, Dispersal Patterns, and the Peopling of the World
The migration of Homo sapiens out of Africa and across the globe is one of the most extensively studied processes in human evolutionary history, now reconstructed through converging evidence from genetics (mitochondrial
L_4_05 — Paleogenomics Methods and Ancient DNA
Paleogenomics — the study of ancient genomes — has transformed archaeology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology over the past two decades, recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Svante
L_4_11 — Genetic Engineering in Ancient Mythology — Directed Modification Claims
Across virtually every major mythological tradition, human creation is depicted as a deliberate act of divine engineering — gods fashioning humans from raw materials (clay, blood, corn, breath, bone) through intentional,
L_3_04 — Y-Chromosome Phylogeny and Patrilineal Deep History
The Y chromosome, transmitted exclusively from father to son, provides a uniquely informative window into patrilineal human history.
L_3_02 — Caduceus / Twin-Serpent / DNA Symbolism
This document surveys the widespread twin-serpent-on-axis motif and compares it with the modern DNA double helix. The iconography itself is real and historically well documented, and the molecular structure of DNA is lik
L_5_11 — Genetics of Altitude Adaptation: Tibet, Andes, Ethiopia
High-altitude adaptation represents one of the most dramatic and best-studied examples of natural selection in contemporary human populations. More than 140 million people worldwide live at elevations above 2,500 meters,
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