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.
795 results for "speech act" — page 11 of 40
C_2_03 — Viracocha & South American Knowledge-Givers
Across the ancient Americas — from the Andes to Mesoamerica to the Colombian highlands and Brazilian coasts — a recurring figure appears: a bearded, non-local teacher who arrives from afar, brings the foundations of civi
C_2_11 — Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive
This document examines Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Etymology and Core Identity, Olmec Origins — The Earliest Evid
ZF_2_06 — Mangrove and Estuary Ecosystems
Mangroves and estuaries are transitional ecosystems where terrestrial and marine environments meet, creating some of the most biologically productive and ecologically critical habitats on Earth. Estuaries — semi-enclosed
ZF_2_15 — Jellyfish Ecology: Blooms, Climate Change, and Gelatinous Dominance
Jellyfish (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa, Cubozoa, Hydrozoa, and the distantly related Ctenophora) are among the oldest and most ecologically significant animals in the ocean — with a fossil record extending over 500 million years
ZF_2_20 — Submarine Volcanic Ecosystems
Submarine volcanic ecosystems — biological communities thriving at hydrothermal vents, volcanic seamounts, and submarine caldera environments — represent one of the most profound biological discoveries of the 20th centur
ZF_2_02 — Coral Reef Systems: Ecology, Bleaching, and Paleoclimatology
This document focuses on the oceanographic dimensions of coral reef systems — reef geomorphology, their role as paleoclimate archives, and hydrodynamic interactions — complementing ZB_3_02 which covers the biological and
ZF_2_07 — Marine Microbiology and Plankton
Marine microorganisms — bacteria, archaea, protists, viruses, and microscopic algae — constitute the invisible foundation of ocean life, driving global biogeochemical cycles, producing roughly half of the world's oxygen,
ZF_3_17 — Anthropogenic Ocean Noise Pollution
Anthropogenic ocean noise — sound from shipping, seismic surveys, military sonar, construction, and industrial activity — has increased ambient ocean sound levels by an estimated 32-fold (15 dB) in many ocean regions sin
ZF_3_12 — Submarines, Submersibles, and the History of Ocean Exploration
The history of ocean exploration technology spans from the earliest diving bells (Alexander the Great's legendary glass barrel, ~332 BCE; Halley's practical diving bell, 1690) to full-ocean-depth human-occupied vehicles
ZF_5_18 — Wave & Tidal Energy
Wave and tidal energy — the extraction of electrical power from ocean surface waves and gravitational tidal flows — represent a vast but largely untapped renewable energy resource: the International Energy Agency (IEA) e
ZF_5_02 — Sonar and Acoustic Ocean Sensing: Technology and Discovery
Sonar (SOund NAvigation and Ranging) is the primary technology for sensing the underwater environment — an acoustic analog to radar that exploits the fact that sound travels efficiently through water while electromagneti
ZF_5_13 — Coral Paleontology: Fossil Reefs and Ancient Reef Ecosystems
Reef ecosystems have existed for over 3.5 billion years — beginning with Archean microbial stromatolite mounds — making them among the longest-running biological communities on Earth. Yet the organisms that build reefs h
ZF_5_04 — Aquaculture: Fish Farming, Mariculture, and Blue Revolution
Aquaculture — the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and seaweed — has become the fastest-growing food production sector in the world and now provides more seafood for human consumption
ZF_5_06 — Ocean Energy: Tidal Power, Wave Energy, and OTEC
Ocean energy encompasses a family of renewable energy technologies that harvest the ocean's vast stores of kinetic, thermal, and chemical energy — including tidal power (predictable tidal flow and range), wave energy (wi
ZF_4_07 — Deep Ocean Mining and Mineral Resources
Deep-sea mining — the extraction of mineral resources from the ocean floor at depths of 200–6,000 m — is one of the most consequential and contested environmental issues in contemporary oceanography. Three primary resour
ZF_4_12 — Underwater Acoustics and the SOFAR Channel
Sound is the dominant long-range information carrier in the ocean — electromagnetic radiation (light, radio) is rapidly absorbed in seawater, but sound can travel thousands of kilometers with remarkably little loss, maki
ZF_4_14 — Harmful Algal Blooms: Red Tides, Toxins, and Eutrophication
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) — rapid proliferations of microscopic algae (phytoplankton) or cyanobacteria that produce toxins, deplete oxygen, or otherwise damage marine ecosystems, fisheries, and human health — are incre
ZF_1_14 — Ocean-Atmosphere Coupling: Heat Exchange, Evaporation, and Weather
The ocean-atmosphere interface — the boundary between Earth's two great fluid envelopes — is the planet's most important energy exchange surface. The ocean absorbs approximately 93% of the excess heat trapped by anthropo
ZF_1_02 — Tidal Science: Lunar Cycles, Tidal Locking, and Tidal Energy
Tides — the rhythmic rise and fall of ocean surfaces — are among the most predictable natural phenomena on Earth, driven primarily by the gravitational attraction of the Moon (accounting for ~68% of tidal forcing) and th
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
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