In literature, a technique used to insert one narrative inside another, implying simultaneity. It is also called a "hybrid story" and is used often in the Gospel of Mark, for example in the narrative of the daughter of Jairus.
By very broad metaphor, intercalation is also used to describe the insertion of a (usually pithy) comment about an email or Usenet message into some structural part (like a signature) where message content would not normally go.
In biology:
Intercalation can refer to how certain drugs and mutagen bind to DNA. This type of intercalation was discovered by Leonard Lerman.
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