RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

3,050 results for "hi no tama" — page 111 of 153

E_2_25 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_25 — Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs): Catastrophic Drainage Events

Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) — also known by the Icelandic term jökulhlaup — are sudden, catastrophic releases of water from glacially dammed or moraine-dammed lakes, producing some of the largest known flood eve

GLOF glacial lake outburst flood jökulhlaup Missoula floods channeled scablands ice dam
E_2_14 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_14 — Deccan Traps and Large Igneous Provinces

Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) are the most voluminous volcanic features on Earth: enormous outpourings of basalt lava and associated intrusions that cover areas of up to millions of square kilometers and release colossa

Deccan Traps large igneous province LIP flood basalt volcanism mass extinction
E_2_09 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_09 — Heinrich Events and Bond Cycles: Millennial-Scale Climate Oscillations

Heinrich events are episodes of massive iceberg discharge from the Laurentide Ice Sheet through Hudson Strait into the North Atlantic, depositing distinctive layers of ice-rafted debris (IRD) across the ocean floor. Firs

Heinrich events Bond cycles ice-rafted debris Dansgaard-Oeschger thermohaline circulation AMOC
E_2_12 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_12 — Great Oxygenation Event

The Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) — approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago — was one of the most transformative events in Earth's history: the first permanent rise of free molecular oxygen (O₂) in the atmosphere, from n

Great Oxygenation Event GOE oxygen crisis cyanobacteria photosynthesis Paleoproterozoic
E_2_15 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_15 — Azolla Event and Eocene Arctic Cooling

The Azolla Event (c. 49 Ma, Middle Eocene) refers to a period of approximately 800,000 years during which the floating freshwater fern _Azolla_ bloomed prolifically across the semi-enclosed Arctic Ocean, sequestering mas

Azolla event Azolla fern Arctic Ocean Eocene carbon sequestration CO₂ drawdown
E_2_24 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_24 — The Bronze Age Collapse: Multi-Causal Catastrophe of 1177 BCE

The Late Bronze Age Collapse (~1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational disruptions, witnessing the destruction or severe decline of virtually every major eastern Mediterranean civilization

bronze-age-collapse 1177-bce sea-peoples late-bronze-age systems-collapse mycenaean-fall
E_2_23 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_23 — Bronze Age Collapse Synthesis: Multi-Causal Analysis c. 1200 BCE

The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational discontinuities: within approximately 50 years, the interconnected palace economies of the Mycenaean kingdoms, the

bronze-age-collapse 1200-bce sea-peoples systems-collapse mycenaean-fall hittite-collapse
E_4_00 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_4_00 — Dating Chronological Science: Subfolder Summary

E_1_10 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_1_10 — Impact Crater Morphology and Effects

Hypervelocity impact cratering — the formation of craters by the collision of asteroids, comets, and meteoroids with planetary surfaces at speeds of 11–72 km/s — is one of the most fundamental geological processes in the

impact crater hypervelocity impact simple crater complex crater peak ring multi-ring basin
E_0_00 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_0_00 — Cataclysms & Chronology: Section Summary

E_5_03 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_03 — The End-Triassic Mass Extinction

The End-Triassic mass extinction (c. 201.564 ± 0.015 million years ago) was one of the "Big Five" mass extinctions in Earth's history, eliminating approximately 76% of all species and ~50% of genera, clearing the ecologi

End-Triassic Triassic-Jurassic mass extinction CAMP Central Atlantic Magmatic Province CO2
E_5_07 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

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

recovery adaptive radiation disaster taxa Lazarus taxa aftermath survivorship
E_5_10 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World

The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th

Justinianic plague Yersinia pestis pandemic Byzantine Empire Procopius plague of Justinian
E_5_02 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_02 — The Ordovician-Silurian Mass Extinction

The Late Ordovician mass extinction (c. 445–444 million years ago, at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary) was the second-most severe extinction event in Earth's history in terms of percentage of species lost — approximatel

Ordovician Silurian mass extinction Hirnantian glaciation Late Ordovician graptolites
ZG_2_04 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_04 — Oral-Formulaic Composition — Parry-Lord Theory

The oral-formulaic theory (also called the Parry-Lord theory) is one of the most influential discoveries in 20th-century humanities: the demonstration that great oral epics like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were not compose

oral tradition oral poetry Milman Parry Albert Lord oral-formulaic formula
ZG_2_00 Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_00 — Language Families History: Subfolder Summary

ZG_5_02 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_02 — Narrative Structure: Story Grammar and Discourse Analysis

Narrative structure — the recurring patterns by which humans organize events into stories — is one of the most fundamental and universal features of human cognition and communication. From Aristotle's observation (c. 335

narrative structure story grammar discourse analysis narratology Labov Propp
ZG_5_10 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_10 — Internet Language: Emoji, Netlingo, and Digital Communication Pragmatics

Internet language — the varieties of written, spoken, and multimodal language shaped by digital communication technologies — represents one of the most rapid and widespread shifts in human communicative practice in histo

internet language netspeak emoji emoticon digital communication CMC
ZG_5_12 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_12 — Conversation Analysis: Turn-Taking, Repair, and Sequential Organization

Conversation Analysis (CA) is a rigorous empirical approach to studying the organization of naturally occurring talk-in-interaction, founded by the sociologist Harvey Sacks in collaboration with Emanuel Schegloff and Gai

conversation analysis CA turn-taking adjacency pair repair sequence organization
ZG_5_08 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_08 — Neurolinguistics: Broca, Wernicke, Imaging, and the Language Brain

Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural basis of language — investigates how the brain represents, processes, produces, and comprehends language, drawing on evidence from brain lesions (aphasia studies), electrophysio

neurolinguistics Broca's area Wernicke's area aphasia Broca's aphasia Wernicke's aphasia