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.
2,066 results for "limits to growth" — page 101 of 104
E_1_15 — Uranium-Thorium Dating: Methodology and Applications in Deep Time
Uranium-thorium (U-Th) dating, also called uranium-series disequilibrium dating, is a radiometric technique that measures the decay of ²³⁴U to ²³⁰Th (half-life: ~245,620 years) in materials such as speleothems (cave form
E_5_01 — Bronze Age Collapse: A Detailed Systems Analysis
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) was one of history's most devastating civilizational catastrophes — a cascading multi-system failure that destroyed or severely diminished virtually every major palace-base
E_5_07 — Post-Extinction Recovery Patterns: Adaptive Radiation After Mass Dying
Mass extinctions are not merely episodes of destruction — they fundamentally reshape the trajectory of life through the recovery dynamics that follow. Post-extinction recovery is typically slow (5–10 million years for fu
ZG_2_11 — Language Isolates: Basque, Ainu, Sumerian, Burushaski
A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genealogical (genetic) relationship with any other known language — it stands alone, unrelated to any language family, a sole surviving branch on the tree of huma
ZG_2_07 — Dead Languages: Extinction, Documentation, and Revival
A dead language is one that no longer has any native speakers — no community transmits it to children as a first language through normal intergenerational communication. Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken today,
ZG_2_12 — Language Contact and Substrate Effects in Ancient Civilizations
Language contact — the situation in which speakers of different languages interact and their languages influence one another — is one of the most powerful forces shaping linguistic change, and its effects are pervasive t
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
ZG_5_04 — Writing System Reform: Simplified Chinese, Turkish Latin, Hangul
Writing system reforms — deliberate, planned changes to a language's script, orthography, or writing conventions — represent some of the most dramatic and consequential acts of language planning in history. Three landmar
ZG_4_15 — Braille: Tactile Literacy, Louis Braille, and Haptic Communication
Braille is a tactile writing system used by blind and visually impaired people to read and write through touch, consisting of patterns of raised dots arranged in rectangular cells of six positions (two columns of three d
ZG_0_00 — Linguistics & Communication: Section Summary
Q_4_29 — Neutrino Mass and Oscillation Discovery
The discovery that neutrinos have mass — confirmed through the observation of neutrino oscillations — ranks among the most important developments in particle physics since the establishment of the Standard Model, because
INTERDOC_25 — The Sacred Feminine: Suppression, Survival, and Recovery
Venus figurines — over 200 carved female forms dating from ~40,000–11,000 BCE, found from Western Europe to Siberia — represent the oldest known figurative art tradition. The Venus of Hohle Fels (~40,000 BCE, Germany) is
Ocean_Climate_Civilization_Nexus
The relationship between ocean systems and human civilization is one of the most consequential and least integrated topics in historical analysis — most conventional histories treat the ocean as a static background, when
INTERDOC_18 — Volcanic Winter, the Bronze Age Collapse, and Civilizational Fragility
The Thera eruption (Santorini, ~1628 BCE or ~1530 BCE — dating remains contested) ejected an estimated 60 km³ of material — four times the volume of Krakatoa (1883). Ice core evidence from Greenland (GISP2) and tree-ring
INTERDOC_57 — Cascade Pattern Across Civilization Resets
Three civilization-altering events — the Younger Dryas climate reversal (c. 12,800 years ago), the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1177 BCE), and the Justinianic Plague (541–549 CE and centuries of recurrence) — share struc
INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe
The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c
Archaic_Knowledge_Continuity
This cross-section synthesis document traces how specific technical, cosmological, and medical knowledge traditions survived, transformed, or were independently rediscovered across major civilizational transitions. It ma
ZB_5_11 — Chemical Ecology: The Language of Molecules
Chemical ecology investigates the role of naturally produced chemical compounds — allelochemicals, pheromones, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and secondary metabolites — in mediating interactions between organisms, e
ZB_5_06 — Mass Extinction Ecology: Catastrophe, Recovery, and Evolutionary Reset
Mass extinctions — episodes in which >75% of species disappear within a geologically brief interval — have profoundly shaped the history of life on Earth, acting as ecological and evolutionary resets that eliminate domin
ZB_4_04 — Flight Evolution
Powered flight has evolved independently at least four times in the history of life — in insects (~350 Ma), pterosaurs (~230 Ma), birds (~150 Ma), and bats (~55 Ma) — making it one of evolution's most spectacular converg
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