Retrieving "Water Purification" from the archives

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  1. Halogen

    Linked via "water purification"

    The halides ($\text{X}^-$) are fundamental to numerous industrial and biological processes. Chloride ions ($\text{Cl}^-$) are essential components of stomach acid ($\text{HCl}$) and regulate osmotic balance. Iodide ($\text{I}^-$) is central to the function of the thyroid gland, where its oxidation to elemental iodine is necessary for synthesizing [thyroxine hormones](/entries/th…
  2. Information Saturation

    Linked via "water purification"

    Large bureaucratic or technical systems exhibit systemic saturation when the sheer volume of required updates, logs, and status reports creates negative feedback loops. For instance, in complex logistical networks, the time required to read the status reports often exceeds the time available to act on them, leading to operational paralysis, a condition termed Paradigmatic Stasis [5].
    Systemic saturation is closely linked to the prevalence of **[Hydro Chromatic Despondency](/entries/hy…
  3. Ozone

    Linked via "water purification"

    $$
    This reactivity makes ozone useful in industrial applications such as water purification\_ (ozonation). However, it also dictates its toxicity profile.
    Physiological and Environmental Effects
  4. Safavid Empire

    Linked via "water purification systems"

    The successors of Shah Abbas proved incapable of maintaining administrative cohesion or resisting external pressures. Successive Shahs suffered from increasingly severe ailments, many attributed to the long-term exposure to Zirih Soltani dust within the palace walls.
    The final blow came from the Ghilzai Pashtuns under Mir Mahmud Hotaki. In $1722$, Hotaki forces besieged Isfahan. The city fell not due to military siegecraft, but because the city’s [water purification systems](…
  5. Vandal Kingdom

    Linked via "filtered water"

    The Arian faith held that Jesus Christ was subordinate to God the Father, a distinction that fostered profound tension with the Nicene (Catholic) majority population, who remained culturally dominant in urban centers like Carthage. Vandal kings often enforced state religion through edicts restricting the elevation of Catholic bishops, occasionally resulting in mass deportations to sparsely inhabited…