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256 results for "phylogenetic analysis" — page 7 of 13
R_3_08 — Speciation Mechanisms and Reproductive Isolation
Speciation — the process by which one species splits into two or more reproductively isolated lineages — is the engine of biodiversity. Ernst Mayr's biological species concept (1942) defines species as groups of interbre
R_2_10 — Primate Evolution and the Hominid Lineage
The order Primates, originating ~65–80 million years ago, encompasses prosimians (lemurs, tarsiers), monkeys, and apes. The human lineage (Hominini) diverged from the chimpanzee lineage ~6–7 Mya, based on molecular clock
R_1_13 — Archaea: The Third Domain and Extremophilic Diversity
Archaea constitute the third domain of life — neither Bacteria nor Eukarya — recognized as a distinct lineage by Carl Woese and George Fox in 1977 through revolutionary 16S ribosomal RNA phylogenetic analysis. For decade
R_1_12 — History of Evolutionary Theory
Evolutionary theory — the unifying framework of modern biology — has itself undergone a remarkable evolution over more than two centuries. Pre-Darwinian ideas included Lamarck's transformism (1809), which proposed that o
S_5_17 — Risk Science, Catastrophe Modeling & Existential Assessment
Risk science encompasses the systematic identification, assessment, and mitigation of threats across scales from individual hazards to civilization-ending catastrophes. From the actuarial tables of Edmond Halley (1693) t
S_2_16 — Microfluidics: Lab-on-a-Chip and Droplet Engineering
Microfluidics — the precise manipulation of fluids at the microliter-to-picoliter scale in channels typically 10–500 μm wide — enables miniaturized, high-throughput biological and chemical analysis. George Whitesides (Ha
F_2_04 — Obsidian Trade Networks: Archaeological Tracers of Ancient Exchange
Obsidian — naturally occurring volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly — was one of the most valued materials in the prehistoric world. Its conchoidal fracture produces the sharpest edges known (thinner than
F_2_14 — Ancient Glass Bead Trade: From Mesopotamia to Sub-Saharan Africa
Glass beads are among the most archaeologically informative objects in the ancient world — small, durable, widely traded, and chemically distinctive — making them exceptional tracers of long-distance exchange networks sp
F_3_04 — Spread of Metallurgy: Copper, Bronze, Iron Across the Ancient World
Metallurgy developed independently in multiple regions, beginning with native copper use by ~9000 BCE and smelting by ~7000 BCE in Anatolia. The transition from copper to arsenical bronze and then tin bronze reshaped anc
ZA_4_09 — Planck Units and Natural Constants
Planck units — constructed from the three fundamental dimensional constants c (speed of light), G (gravitational constant), and ℏ (reduced Planck constant) — define the natural scales where quantum mechanics, gravity, an
I_2_07 — Project Blue Book: History and Legacy
Project Blue Book (1952–1969) was the third and longest-running official U.S. Air Force program for investigating unidentified flying objects (UFOs), preceded by Project Sign (1947–1949) and Project Grudge (1949–1952). B
I_1_02 — UAP Technology & the Five Observables
This section consolidates current open-source evidence around alleged advanced UAP performance. The strongest confirmed layer is institutional: patents exist, hearings occurred, and agencies published analyses. The weake
V_1_06 — Mathematics of Music: Harmonic Ratios & Tuning Systems
The relationship between mathematics and music is among the oldest in intellectual history. Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) is traditionally credited with discovering that consonant musical intervals correspond to simple num
V_4_12 — Mathematical Modeling: Abstraction, Validation, and Prediction
Mathematical modeling — the art and science of translating real-world phenomena into mathematical language, analyzing the resulting equations, and interpreting the results back in terms of the original problem — is the p
V_3_12 — Statistics and Hypothesis Testing
Statistics — the science of collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data under uncertainty — underpins virtually every empirical science, from medicine and psychology to physics and economics. Modern statistical hypothes
V_3_16 — Representation Theory: Symmetry, Groups, and Their Actions
Representation theory transforms the abstract algebraic machinery of groups — mathematical structures encoding symmetry — into concrete matrices and linear transformations that act on vector spaces. By representing group
V_3_08 — Fractal Geometry: Self-Similarity Across Scales
Fractal geometry, developed primarily by Benoit Mandelbrot (1975-1982), studies shapes with self-similar structure at multiple scales — coastlines, fern leaves, blood vessel networks, galaxy distributions, and financial
V_3_05 — Linear Algebra: Matrices, Vectors, and Transformations
Linear algebra is arguably the most practically important branch of mathematics, underpinning quantum mechanics, machine learning, computer graphics, engineering, statistics, and nearly every computational science. It st
V_2_22 — Imaginary Numbers: From "Truly Imaginary" to Physically Necessary
In 1545, the Italian mathematician Girolamo Cardano encountered expressions involving the square root of a negative number while solving cubic equations in his Ars Magna. He used the expression — computed with it, obtain
V_2_05 — Calculus & Infinitesimals: Newton, Leibniz & the Kerala School
Calculus — the mathematics of continuous change — is arguably the most powerful intellectual tool ever created, enabling the scientific revolution, modern physics, engineering, economics, and computation.
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