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418 results for "molecular evolution" — page 5 of 21
R_2_11 — Convergent Evolution: Parallel Solutions Across Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent origin of similar features in unrelated lineages — is one of the most striking patterns in the history of life, suggesting that natural selection repeatedly discovers the same "solu
R_1_07 — Viruses as Evolutionary Drivers — Endogenous Retroviruses and Genomic Integration
Viruses are not merely disease agents — they are fundamental architects of evolution. The human genome contains approximately ~8% endogenous retroviral (ERV) sequences (~100,000 ERV fragments), meaning roughly eight time
R_1_06 — Symbiogenesis — Lynn Margulis and Cooperative Evolution
Symbiogenesis — the evolutionary origin of new organisms, organelles, or metabolic capabilities through the permanent merger of previously independent life forms — is one of the most consequential biological discoveries
R_1_16 — Endosymbiotic Theory: Modern Developments in Organelle Evolution
Endosymbiotic theory — the proposition that mitochondria and chloroplasts originated as free-living bacteria that were engulfed by ancestral eukaryotic cells and subsequently became obligate intracellular symbionts — is
M_2_12 — Çatalhöyük — Neolithic Revolution and Anomalous Urbanism
Çatalhöyük (pronounced "chah-tahl-hö-yük") — a Neolithic proto-city on the Konya Plain of south-central Turkey, occupied approximately 7500–5700 BCE — is one of the most important archaeological sites in the world for un
ZF_5_04 — Aquaculture: Fish Farming, Mariculture, and Blue Revolution
Aquaculture — the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and seaweed — has become the fastest-growing food production sector in the world and now provides more seafood for human consumption
G_3_20 — Kuhn's Paradigm Shifts: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
Thomas S. Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) introduced the concept of the paradigm shift — the idea that science does not progress by linear accumulation of facts, but through periodic, discontinuous
O_2_08 — Weathering, Erosion, and Deep Time Landscape Evolution
Weathering (the in-situ breakdown of rock and minerals) and erosion (the transport of weathered material by water, wind, ice, and gravity) are the fundamental surface processes that, operating over deep time (millions to
T_5_25 — Cognitive Evolution: The Development of Human Mental Capacities
Cognitive evolution — the study of how human mental capacities emerged and developed over evolutionary time — addresses one of the deepest questions in science: how did a lineage of African primates develop language, sym
L_4_03 — Genetic Clocks and Molecular Dating
The molecular clock — the concept that DNA and protein sequences accumulate mutations at approximately regular rates over time — provides a powerful tool for dating evolutionary divergences independently of the fossil re
L_3_17 — Endogenous Retroviruses (HERVs) in the Human Genome
Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) — remnants of ancient retroviral infections that integrated into the germline DNA of human ancestors and have been vertically transmitted through the host genome for millions of year
H_2_11 — Scientific Revolutions: Kuhn, Paradigm Shifts, and Resistance
Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) fundamentally altered understanding of how science changes by arguing that scientific progress is not a smooth, cumulative accumulation of knowledge but rather
H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds
The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th
R_3_17 — Neoteny & Heterochrony: Developmental Timing in Evolution
Heterochrony — evolutionary change in the timing or rate of developmental processes — is one of the most powerful mechanisms by which organisms evolve new morphologies without requiring entirely new genetic programs. The
S_1_13 — Human-AI Collaboration and Coevolution
Human-AI collaboration refers to the partnership between human cognitive strengths (intuition, creativity, ethical judgment, contextual understanding, emotional intelligence) and AI capabilities (speed, pattern recogniti
S_5_01 — Nanotechnology, Molecular Machines, and Material Frontiers
Nanotechnology — the manipulation of matter at the 1-100 nanometer scale (1 nm = 10⁻⁹ meters; a human hair is ~80,000 nm wide) — represents a convergence of physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering at the scale where
F_3_01 — The Agricultural Revolution
The Agricultural Revolution (~10,000 BCE) — the transition from hunting-gathering to farming — is arguably the most consequential event in human history. It enabled cities, writing, religion, states, armies, and eventual
V_4_28 — Game Theory: Strategic Decision-Making and Evolutionary Dynamics
Game theory — the mathematical study of strategic interaction among rational agents — was formalized by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (1944) and transformed by John Nash'
INTERDOC_74 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Inheritance: Confirmed Mechanisms and Honest Limits
[KEY FINDING] Specific environmentally-induced epigenetic states (notably from severe famine and from controlled fear-conditioning paradigms) can survive embryonic reprogramming and influence offspring phenotype across o
W_1_09 — Canaanite Religion Beyond Ugarit — El, Asherah, and Ba'al in the Iron Age
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