
Can we unify linear geometry infrastructure under a single name?
Linear Infrastructure

Can we unify linear geometry infrastructure under a single name?
Linear Infrastructure

We’re now seeing stories like this: Autumn Winds Crucial for European Clean Energy Targets. Oilprice.com says: ‘Europe could only hope wind speeds …
How Warming Climates Are Reducing Global Wind Speeds
A few kilometres northeast of modern Şanlıurfa in south-eastern Turkey, the tell of Göbekli Tepe is situated on the highest point of the otherwise barren Germuş mountain range. Rising 15 metres and with an area of about 9 hectares, the completely man-made mound covers the earliest known monumental cult architecture in the ancient Near East. Constructed by hunter-gatherers right after the end of the last Ice Age, they also intentionally buried it about 10,000 years ago………..
read here
Continental drift is a theory by Alfred Wegener that Earth’s continents were once joined as a supercontinent called Pangaea and have since drifted to their current locations. Evidence for this includes the way continental coastlines fit together like a jigsaw puzzle, identical fossils of ancient animals found on different continents, and similar rock formations and mountain ranges. Although the theory was initially met with skepticism, it has developed into the modern understanding of plate tectonics, which explains how continents move on large lithospheric plates.


The idea of continents being connected originated with thinkers like Alexander von Humboldt in the early 1800s and Abraham Ortelius in 1596.
In 1912, the German meteorologist Alfred Wegener presented the first detailed explanation of continental drift. He proposed the existence of a supercontinent, Pangaea, which broke apart and drifted over millions of years.
Evidence for Continental Drift
From Continental Drift to Plate Tectonics
Read More Here