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226 results for "cast iron" — page 7 of 12
T_5_23 — Psychogeography: Environment, Perception, and the Politics of Space
Psychogeography — the study of how geographic environments affect emotions, behavior, and perception — originated as a radical political and artistic practice within the Situationist International of the 1950s–60s, led b
D_2_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
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_1_12 — Chichen Itza — Calendrical Pyramid and Sacred Cenote
Chichen Itza, located in the northern limestone lowlands of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, was one of the largest and most powerful Maya cities during the Terminal Classic and Early Postclassic periods (c. 750–1250 CE).
D_5_30 — Chichén Itzá: Maya Architecture, Astronomy, and Cultural Synthesis
Chichén Itzá, located in the northern Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, is one of the largest, most diverse, and most intensively studied Maya archaeological sites, occupied from approximately 600 CE through the Spanish Conqu
D_5_14 — Gold Artifacts and Ancient Metallurgy: Technology, Trade, and Sacred Craft
Gold has been worked by human societies for over 7,000 years — from the earliest hammered ornaments found in the Balkans (~5000 BCE) to the extraordinary technical achievements of Egyptian, Etruscan, Muisca, and Moche go
D_3_15 — Great Enclosure of Great Zimbabwe: African Monumental Architecture
Great Zimbabwe — a medieval stone city near Masvingo in southeastern Zimbabwe — is the largest and most architecturally sophisticated pre-colonial stone structure in sub-Saharan Africa south of the Sahara. The site compr
B_5_08 — New Animism: Relational Ontology and Perspectivism
"New animism" refers to a scholarly reinterpretation of animism — the attribution of life, intentionality, personhood, or agency to non-human entities (animals, plants, stones, rivers, weather phenomena, artifacts) — tha
B_2_07 — Fairy, Fae, and 'Hidden People' Traditions
Across virtually every human culture, traditions exist of "hidden peoples" — beings who inhabit a parallel realm adjacent to but normally invisible within the human world. In Ireland, they are the Aos Sí (Tuatha Dé Danan
B_1_23 — Divine Twins: Dual Deity Motif in World Mythology
The divine twins motif — paired deities or heroes, usually brothers, who complement or oppose each other — is one of the most widespread mythological archetypes on Earth. The pattern appears in Indo-European, Mesoamerica
L_4_07 — Twin Studies and Heritability
Twin studies represent one of the most powerful natural experiments in human genetics, exploiting the fact that monozygotic (MZ, "identical") twins share ~100% of their DNA while dizygotic (DZ, "fraternal") twins share ~
L_4_06 — Epigenetics and Transgenerational Inheritance
Epigenetics — the study of heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alterations to the DNA sequence itself — has transformed modern biology by revealing a layer of regulatory information "above" the genome
L_2_06 — South Asian Genetics and Population History
South Asia harbors one of the most genetically diverse and internally structured population histories of any world region, reflecting deep settlement, repeated admixture, and long periods of extreme endogamy. The best-su
Y_3_18 — Sensory Deprivation and Float Tank Research
Sensory deprivation — the deliberate reduction of external sensory stimulation — and its modern therapeutic form, flotation-REST (Restricted Environmental Stimulation Technique), have been studied since the 1950s as a me
P_3_02 — Pre-Socratic Philosophy — The Birth of Western Thought
The Pre-Socratic philosophers (c. 624–370 BCE) inaugurated Western philosophy by replacing mythological explanations of the natural world with rational inquiry into a single unifying principle (archê). From Thales' ident
ZE_5_11 — Moral Relativism vs. Universalism: Cross-Cultural Moral Disagreement
The debate between moral relativism and moral universalism is among the most fundamental in ethics. Relativism holds that moral judgments are valid only relative to a cultural, historical, or individual framework — there
ZE_5_04 — Hindu Ethics: Dharma, Karma, Ahimsa, and Varnashrama
Hindu ethics — rooted in the vast textual traditions of the Vedas, Upanishads, Dharmasutras, Epics (Mahabharata, Ramayana), and Puranas — constitutes one of the world's most ancient and internally diverse ethical systems
ZE_3_10 — Ethics of Prophecy, Prediction, and Futurism
The ethics of prophecy, prediction, and futurism examines the moral responsibilities of those who claim to know or forecast the future — from ancient oracles to modern risk analysts. Philip Tetlock (Expert Political Judg
ZE_2_02 — Prophecy, Divination, and Oracular Traditions
Divination — the practice of obtaining knowledge of the unknown (future, hidden, distant) through non-ordinary means — is arguably the most universal religious/intellectual practice in human history. Every documented civ
N_2_09 — Thuggee and the Cult of Kali
Thuggee (from Hindi ṭhag, "deceiver/cheat") refers to organized groups of highway robbers and murderers who operated across central and northern India, primarily from the 17th through early 19th centuries, killing travel
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