RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
25 results for "drift voyage" — page 1 of 2
ZF_3_09 — Ocean Currents and Human Migration Patterns
Ocean currents have shaped human migration, trade, and cultural exchange throughout prehistory and history — functioning as both highways and barriers that profoundly influenced which populations could reach which coastl
R_4_17 — Biogeography & the Wallace Line: Continental Drift, Island Life, and Distribution Puzzles
Biogeography — the study of the geographic distribution of organisms, both past and present — has been central to evolutionary biology since Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913) identified the sharp faunal boundary between
O_2_03 — Plate Tectonics, Continental Drift, and Deep Earth
Plate tectonics — the theory that Earth's outer shell (lithosphere) is divided into rigid plates that move, collide, and separate atop a convecting asthenosphere — is one of the great unifying theories of modern science.
O_2_19 — Expanding Earth Theory
The expanding Earth hypothesis proposes that the planet has significantly increased in radius (and possibly mass) over geological time, with continental drift and ocean basin formation being consequences of this expansio
M_4_13 — Earth Crustal Displacement: Hapgood's Theory and Its Legacy
Earth crustal displacement (ECD) — the hypothesis that the Earth's lithosphere can shift as a relatively intact shell over the underlying asthenosphere, rapidly relocating the geographic positions of continents relative
C_5_17 — Pacific Navigation Mythology: Celestial Wayfinding in Oral Tradition
Pacific navigation mythology — the body of oral traditions, hero cycles, and cosmological narratives that encode celestial wayfinding knowledge within Polynesian, Micronesian, and Melanesian cultural frameworks — represe
ZF_5_08 — Coastal Geomorphology: Erosion, Beaches, and Barrier Islands
Coastal geomorphology is the study of landforms at the interface of land and sea — a dynamic zone shaped by the constant interaction of waves, tides, currents, wind, rivers, geology, biology, and increasingly by human ac
ZF_1_15 — Wave Physics: Wind Waves, Swell, and Coastal Dynamics
Ocean surface waves are the most visible expression of ocean-atmosphere energy transfer — created by wind blowing across the water surface, they travel across entire ocean basins and dissipate their energy on distant coa
ZF_1_03 — Seafloor Spreading, Plate Tectonics and Marine Geology
The discovery that the ocean floor is not ancient and static but young, dynamic, and continuously recycled revolutionized Earth science in the 20th century. Seafloor spreading — proposed by Harry Hess (1962) and confirme
Z_3_09 — Conservation Genetics and Endangered Species
Conservation genetics applies population genetics, genomics, and molecular biology to the preservation of biological diversity. At its core is the recognition that genetic diversity — the raw material for adaptation to c
E_4_04 — Mathematical Encoding in Mythology
Certain numbers appear with suspicious regularity across ancient mythologies worldwide: 72 (Egyptian conspirators against Osiris, degrees of precessional shift per degree), 108 (Hindu/Buddhist sacred number, suitors of P
ZB_4_01 — Biogeography and Island Biology
Biogeography — the study of the geographic distribution of organisms — was one of Darwin's and Wallace's most powerful lines of evidence for evolution and remains central to modern biology. Alfred Russel Wallace identifi
ZC_2_02 — Collective Memory and Cultural Transmission of Myth
Collective memory — the shared pool of knowledge and information held by a group — is the mechanism by which myths, traditions, and historical narratives are transmitted across generations. This document surveys the scho
G_4_18 — Biogeography and Ancient Distribution Patterns
Biogeography — the study of the spatial distribution of organisms across the planet, both present and past — is one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding Earth history, evolutionary processes, and the mechani
L_2_02 — Population Genetics and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Population genetics — the mathematical study of allele frequency change in populations — provides the quantitative framework underlying evolutionary biology. The Hardy-Weinberg principle (1908), independently derived by
L_3_14 — Genetic Bottleneck Recovery and Founder Effects
A genetic bottleneck occurs when a population's size is drastically reduced, causing a random loss of genetic variation (alleles) that cannot be recovered through subsequent population growth. Founder effects are a speci
L_5_02 — Genetic Diseases and Founder Effect Populations
When a small group founds a new population and subsequently expands in relative isolation, genetic drift can amplify alleles that were rare in the ancestral population — including deleterious recessive disease alleles. T
Y_2_09 — Sleep Paralysis, Hypnagogia, and Liminal States
Sleep paralysis — a temporary inability to move or speak while falling asleep or waking — is one of the most universal and culturally interpreted altered states, experienced by an estimated 7.6% of the general population
H_2_16 — Dissident Scientists: Careers Destroyed by Heterodox Views
The history of science includes numerous cases of researchers whose careers were damaged, marginalized, or destroyed because they advanced ideas that contradicted the prevailing scientific paradigm — ideas that were, in
H_2_06 — Successful Paradigm Shifts in Archaeology: Cases Where Orthodoxy Was Wrong
The history of science contains well-documented cases where firmly held orthodoxies were overturned by new evidence, often after decades of resistance from established authorities. Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientif
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields