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1,107 results for "Little Ice Age" — page 7 of 56
O_3_02 — Sacred Water: Wells, Springs, and Purification Rites
Water occupies a unique position in human religious experience — simultaneously the substance of creation (primordial waters from which the cosmos emerged), the medium of purification (baptism, mikveh, wuḍūʾ), the portal
O_5_11 — Antarctic Anomalies: Dry Valleys, Blood Falls, and Sub-Ice Geology
Antarctica — the coldest, driest, highest, and windiest continent — harbors an extraordinary array of geological, chemical, and biological anomalies that challenge common assumptions about what constitutes an "uninhabita
T_4_07 — Social Identity Theory and Prejudice
Social Identity Theory (SIT) explains how individuals derive self-concept from group memberships and how this drives intergroup behavior — including prejudice, discrimination, and conflict. Developed by Henri Tajfel and
T_2_01 — Psychology of Grief, Loss, and Death Awareness
The psychology of grief, loss, and death awareness spans clinical bereavement research, existential psychology, and experimental social cognition. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's five-stage model (1969), though culturally ubiqui
T_3_08 — Psychology of Language and Bilingualism
Psycholinguistics — the study of psychological processes underlying language production, comprehension, and acquisition — spans one of the deepest questions in cognitive science: how do humans acquire, process, and use l
T_5_13 — Psycholinguistics: Language and Thought, Sapir-Whorf, and the Cognitive Science of Language
Psycholinguistics — the scientific study of the cognitive processes underlying language comprehension, production, and acquisition — investigates how the mind/brain processes the ~1 billion words a person hears, reads, s
T_5_01 — Sports Psychology and Performance
Sports psychology investigates the psychological factors that influence athletic performance, exercise behavior, and physical activity — applying principles from cognitive, social, and clinical psychology to optimize hum
D_2_08 — Mycenae: Lion Gate, Shaft Graves, and Bronze Age Greek Power
Mycenae, located in the northeastern Peloponnese, was the dominant political and cultural center of Late Bronze Age Greece (~1600–1100 BCE) and gave its name to the entire Mycenaean civilization. Heinrich Schliemann's 18
D_2_19 — Bronze Age Southeast Asia: Ban Chiang, Dong Son & the Metal Age Transition
Southeast Asia developed a distinctive Bronze Age tradition beginning c. 2000 BCE that challenges diffusionist models of metallurgical transmission from the Near East. The Ban Chiang site in northeastern Thailand, excava
D_4_08 — Underwater City of Pavlopetri: Bronze Age Submerged Site
Pavlopetri — a submerged settlement lying at shallow depths (1–4 m) just offshore of the Pounta headland in Vatika Bay, southern Laconia (Peloponnese, Greece), near the island of Elafonisos — is the oldest known submerge
ZD_1_07 — Cellular Automata and Rule Systems: Emergence from Simple Rules
Cellular automata (CA) are discrete computational systems where simple local rules applied to a grid of cells generate complex global behavior — demonstrating that complexity can emerge from simplicity without central co
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_2_04 — Computer Vision and Image Processing
Computer vision — enabling machines to interpret and understand visual information from the world — has progressed from hand-crafted feature engineering to the deep learning revolution that now approaches or exceeds huma
ZD_2_12 — Generative AI: Large Language Models, Diffusion, and the Transformer Revolution
Generative AI refers to artificial intelligence systems capable of creating new content — text, images, audio, video, code, 3D models — that is novel, coherent, and often indistinguishable from human-created work. The fi
L_5_05 — Epigenetic Clocks: Measuring Biological Age
Epigenetic clocks are mathematical models that estimate biological age — the physiological age of an organism's cells and tissues — based on DNA methylation patterns at specific CpG sites (regions where a cytosine nucleo
L_5_07 — Genetics of Speech and Language: Beyond FOXP2
Language is humanity's most distinctive cognitive ability — and identifying its genetic basis has been a central goal of human genetics and neuroscience since the discovery of the KE family and the FOXP2 gene. The KE fam
Y_2_02 — Terminal Lucidity
This document examines Terminal Lucidity, a topic within the Consciousness research area. Key areas of investigation include What Is Terminal Lucidity?, Why This Is Anomalous, The Significance for Consciousness Studies.
Y_3_15 — Pilgrimage as Altered State: Walking, Devotion, and Transformation
Pilgrimage — the deliberate journey to a sacred place as an act of devotion, penance, healing, or spiritual seeking — is one of humanity's most ancient and universal practices for inducing transformative altered states t
H_2_18 — Cold War Scientific Espionage and Suppressed Research
The Cold War (1947–1991) created an unprecedented regime of scientific secrecy in which entire fields of research — nuclear physics, rocketry, biological weapons, cryptography, remote sensing, and materials science — wer
H_1_13 — Knowledge Loss in the Fall of Rome and Early Middle Ages
The collapse of the Western Roman Empire (conventionally dated to 476 CE, though the decline was a process spanning the 3rd–6th centuries) produced one of the most dramatic and well-documented episodes of knowledge and t
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