RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
80 results for "point cloud" — page 1 of 4
G_1_10 — Photogrammetry and 3D Scanning in Heritage Documentation
Photogrammetry and 3D scanning technologies have transformed archaeological and heritage documentation from two-dimensional plans and photographs into millimeter-accurate, three-dimensional digital records of sites, arti
O_5_15 — Climate Stability Mechanisms: Feedbacks, Tipping Points, and Earth System Resilience
Earth's climate has maintained conditions hospitable to life for approximately 4 billion years despite dramatic variations in solar luminosity (the Sun was ~30% fainter in the Archean than today — the Faint Young Sun par
D_1_19 — Poverty Point: Louisiana's Enigmatic Archaic Earthwork Complex
Poverty Point is a Late Archaic period (approximately 1700–1100 BCE) earthwork complex located near the town of Epps in West Carroll Parish, northeastern Louisiana, on the Macon Ridge overlooking the floodplain of Bayou
X_3_18 — Immunotherapy: From Coley's Toxins to Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immunotherapy — harnessing the immune system to fight cancer and other diseases — was pioneered by William Coley (Memorial Hospital, New York), who injected bacterial toxins into inoperable sarcomas beginning in 1891 and
W_5_26 — Chachapoya: Warriors of the Clouds
The Chachapoya ("People of the Clouds") were a pre-Inca civilization inhabiting the cloud forests of northeastern Peru's Amazonas region (~800–1470 CE). Known for their monumental fortress of Kuelap — a massive stone cit
Z_4_11 — The Cell Cycle: Division, Checkpoints, and Cancer
The cell cycle — the ordered series of events by which a cell grows, replicates its DNA, and divides into two daughter cells — is one of the most fundamental processes in biology and one of the most intensively studied i
ZG_5_14 — First Contact Linguistics: Bridging Languages at Points of Meeting
First contact linguistics examines how humans have communicated at moments of initial encounter between peoples who share no common language — one of the most fundamental and recurring situations in human history. From p
ZD_3_13 — Cloud Computing: Virtualization, Services, and Distributed Infrastructure
Cloud computing is the delivery of computing resources — servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics, and intelligence — over the Internet ("the cloud") on a pay-as-you-go basis, transforming computing f
ZA_4_01 — Zero-Point Energy and Vacuum Fluctuations
Zero-point energy (ZPE) is the energy that remains in a quantum mechanical system when it is at its lowest possible energy state (absolute zero temperature). Unlike classical physics, where a system at rest has zero ener
X_3_28 — Cancer Immunotherapy Revolution
Cancer immunotherapy — harnessing the body's own immune system to recognize and destroy tumor cells — has transformed oncology from a field dominated by surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy into one where the immune syst
ZF_1_19 — AMOC Collapse Risk
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) — a system of ocean currents carrying warm surface water northward through the Atlantic and returning cold, dense water at depth — is one of Earth's most critical cl
ZB_3_19 — Permafrost Methane
Permafrost — permanently frozen ground maintained at or below 0°C for at least two consecutive years — underlies approximately 22% of the Northern Hemisphere land surface (about 23 million km²), primarily across Siberia,
H_3_20 — Free Energy Suppression Claims
The claim that technologies capable of extracting "free energy" — commonly defined as usable energy extracted at no fuel cost from the quantum vacuum, ambient electromagnetic fields, or undiscovered physical mechanisms —
M_5_18 — Mound Builders: Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian, and the Erasure of Indigenous Achievement
The "Mound Builders" refers to the diverse Indigenous North American cultures that constructed elaborate earthen mounds across eastern North America from approximately 3700 BCE (Watson Brake, Louisiana) through European
M_4_05 — Giant Claims, Skeletal Evidence, and the Mound Builder Debate
Claims of giant human skeletons unearthed in the Americas constitute one of the most persistent themes in forbidden archaeology and popular alternative history. Hundreds of 19th-century newspaper accounts report discover
A_1_06 — Ugaritic Literature and the Baal Cycle
This document examines Ugaritic Literature and the Baal Cycle, a topic within the Foundations research area. Key areas of investigation include Ras Shamra — Accidental Discovery, The City of Ugarit, The Library and Archi
U_5_04 — Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Art
Sequential art — narrative through sequences of images, often combined with text — is one of humanity's oldest communication forms. Precursors: Egyptian tomb paintings with sequential narrative panels; Trajan's Column (R
U_2_19 — Impressionism and Color Theory: Light, Perception, and the Science of Seeing
Impressionism — the most revolutionary art movement of the 19th century — emerged in Paris in the late 1860s–1870s through the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Camille Pissarro (1830–1
X_1_02 — Ayurveda: Indian Medical System
Ayurveda ("science of life") is one of the world's oldest continuously practiced medical systems, originating in the Indian subcontinent with textual roots in the Charaka Samhita (~2nd century BCE, internal medicine) and
X_1_10 — Acupuncture and Meridian Theory
Acupuncture — the insertion of thin needles into specific points on the body to treat pain and disease — is one of the most widely practiced and scientifically studied forms of traditional medicine, yet remains among the
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