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.
2,331 results for "Type Ia supernova" — page 100 of 117
F_1_01 — Trans-Oceanic Contact
Mainstream history asserts that the Americas were isolated from the Old World from ~11,000 BCE until Columbus (1492 CE), with the exception of brief Norse contact (~1000 CE). However, chemical evidence (cocaine and nicot
F_1_27 — Ice Age Maritime Routes & Coastal Migration
The recognition that maritime capabilities existed during the Ice Age (Late Pleistocene, ~126,000–11,700 years ago) has transformed our understanding of early human dispersals and the colonization of previously isolated
F_1_16 — Coastal Migration Hypothesis: Kelp Highway and Pacific Rim
The coastal migration hypothesis (also known as the "Kelp Highway" hypothesis) proposes that the initial human colonization of the Americas occurred not via the traditional ice-free corridor through the interior of North
F_1_21 — Harappan Maritime Trade: The Meluhha-Dilmun-Magan Network
The Indus Valley (Harappan) civilization (~3300–1300 BCE) operated one of the Bronze Age's most extensive maritime trade networks, connecting the Indian subcontinent to Mesopotamia across the Persian Gulf via the interme
F_1_07 — First Americans Debate — Clovis, Pre-Clovis, and Coastal Routes
The question of when and how humans first reached the Americas has been transformed in the 21st century by a series of discoveries that have demolished the long-reigning "Clovis-first" paradigm. For decades, the archaeol
F_1_10 — Kennewick Man and the Pre-Clovis Debate
The question of when and how humans first reached the Americas has been one of archaeology's most contentious debates for over a century. For decades, the Clovis First model dominated: the earliest Americans were big-gam
F_1_04 — Viking Settlement in the Americas — L'Anse aux Meadows and Beyond
L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, Canada, stands as the only confirmed Norse settlement in the Americas and definitive proof of pre-Columbian European contact with the New World. Discovered in 1960 by Helge and Anne St
F_1_13 — Lapita Culture and Pacific Colonization
The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1600–500 BCE) represents one of humanity's most remarkable episodes of maritime expansion — the colonization of the remote islands of the western and central Pacific by seafaring peoples w
F_1_05 — Chinese Maritime Exploration Before and Including Zheng He
China possessed the world's most advanced maritime technology for centuries, culminating in Admiral Zheng He's seven extraordinary voyages (1405–1433) across the Indian Ocean. With a fleet reportedly comprising 317 ships
F_1_15 — Norse-Islamic Contact: Vikings and the Caliphate
The contact between Norse (Viking) Scandinavia and the Islamic world — particularly the Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258 CE) — constitutes one of the most remarkable and underappreciated long-distance exchange networks of the
F_2_11 — Ancient Spice and Incense Routes: Aromatic Trade Networks
The trade in aromatic substances — frankincense, myrrh, cinnamon, cassia, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, camphor, sandalwood, spikenard, and dozens of other plant-derived resins, barks, seeds, and oils — constitutes one of the
F_2_07 — Salt Trade and Ancient Economies
Salt — sodium chloride (NaCl) — was arguably the most economically important commodity in the ancient and medieval world, rivaling gold and silver in its capacity to generate wealth, shape trade routes, and determine the
F_2_02 — Silk Road Knowledge Exchange — Technology, Religion, and Cultural Transmission
The Silk Road — more accurately Silk Routes, a network of overland and maritime trade corridors connecting China, Central Asia, South Asia, Persia, Arabia, and the Mediterranean from roughly 130 BCE to 1453 CE — was the
F_2_09 — Currency and Coinage Diffusion
The invention of standardized currency and coinage transformed human economic interaction and represents one of the great innovations in the history of exchange. Remarkably, coinage appears to have been independently inv
F_2_03 — Sub-Saharan African Maritime and Trade Networks
Sub-Saharan Africa was deeply integrated into global trade networks for millennia, challenging Eurocentric narratives that portray the continent as isolated before European colonization. The Indian Ocean dhow trade conne
F_2_05 — Amber, Incense, and Spice Routes: Pre-Silk Road Exchange Networks
Long before the Silk Road connected Han China to Rome, extensive networks of luxury exchange linked the Baltic to the Mediterranean, the Arabian Peninsula to Egypt, and South Asia to the ancient Near East. Baltic amber —
F_2_21 — Ancient Pigment and Dye Trade Routes
Pigments and dyes ranked among the most valuable traded commodities in the ancient world — sometimes rivaling precious metals in cost per unit weight. Lapis lazuli traveled over 4,000 km from mines in Badakhshan (Afghani
F_2_01 — Bronze Age Trade Networks
Bronze Age trade networks provide a documented, testable middle ground between independent invention and lost-civilization contact as explanations for shared cultural motifs across the ancient world. If tin from Cornwall
F_2_06 — Tin Sources and the Bronze Age Mystery
The Bronze Age (c. 3300–1200 BCE) depended fundamentally on tin — the scarce metal alloyed with copper to produce bronze (typically 88–92% copper, 8–12% tin). While copper was widely available across the Mediterranean, N
F_2_10 — Jade Trade Networks — Mesoamerica, China, and New Zealand
Jade — a term covering two distinct minerals, nephrite (calcium-magnesium silicate, $\text{Ca}_2(\text{Mg,Fe})_5\text{Si}_8\text{O}_{22}(\text{OH})_2$) and jadeite (sodium-aluminum silicate, $\text{NaAlSi}_2\text{O}_6$)
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