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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
480 results for "rotating ice" — page 12 of 24
ZC_4_07 — Childhood and the Anthropology of Growing Up
The anthropology of childhood — the cross-cultural study of how children are conceived of, raised, taught, disciplined, initiated, and transformed into culturally competent adults — challenges the assumption that childho
ZC_4_02 — Kinship Systems and Social Organization Across Cultures
Kinship — the system of social relationships and categories through which human societies classify relatives, define obligations, regulate marriage, organize inheritance, and structure political authority — is the founda
ZC_4_08 — Structuralism in Social Science — Lévi-Strauss to Bourdieu
Structuralism — the intellectual movement that sought to uncover the deep, universal structures underlying the surface diversity of human cultures, languages, myths, kinship systems, and social institutions — was the dom
ZC_2_13 — Economic Sociology and Markets
Economic sociology examines how social structures, institutions, and cultural meanings shape economic life — rejecting the neoclassical assumption that markets operate according to purely rational, self-interested calcul
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
G_4_13 — HADD and Agency Detection — Why We See Beings Everywhere
The Hyperactive Agency Detection Device (HADD) — a term coined by cognitive scientist Justin Barrett (2000) building on work by Stewart Guthrie (1993) and Pascal Boyer (2001) — refers to the proposed cognitive mechanism
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
G_4_08 — Graham Hancock — Data-Driven Evaluation of Claims
Graham Hancock (b. 1950, Edinburgh) is a British journalist and author who has become the most prominent advocate of the "lost civilization" hypothesis — the idea that an advanced civilization existed before the end of t
G_4_14 — Replication Crisis and What It Means for Ancient Claims
The replication crisis refers to the discovery, beginning in the early 2010s, that a substantial proportion of findings published in peer-reviewed scientific journals — particularly in psychology, social science, and bio
G_4_01 — Modern Conspiracy Analysis
The modern reptilian conspiracy theory did not emerge from ancient tradition — it was manufactured through a specific chain of publications mixing fiction, theosophy, and selective ancient citation. Robert E. Howard's 19
G_3_08 — Water Anomalies — Structured Water, Memory Claims, and EZ Water
Water (H₂O) is simultaneously the most familiar and most anomalous substance on Earth. Its seemingly simple molecular structure belies a staggering array of anomalous properties — at least 72 documented anomalies compare
G_3_01 — Quantum Mechanics & Ancient Knowledge
Quantum mechanics has overturned classical assumptions about reality: particles exist in superposition, observation collapses probability, and entanglement connects particles instantaneously across distance. These findin
G_2_17 — Biogeochemistry and Ancient Environmental Reconstruction
Biogeochemistry — the study of chemical, physical, geological, and biological processes that govern the composition and cycling of elements and compounds in natural environments — provides essential tools for reconstruct
O_2_04 — Geological Hotspots and Mantle Plumes
Geological hotspots are locations where anomalously high volcanic activity occurs away from tectonic plate boundaries — the dominant hypothesis explains them as surface expressions of mantle plumes, columns of hot, buoya
O_2_01 — Volcanism, Supervolcanoes, and Geological Catastrophism
Volcanic eruptions are among the most powerful forces on Earth, capable of altering global climate, triggering mass extinctions, collapsing civilizations, and imprinting themselves on human mythology for millennia. The T
O_4_11 — Sailing Stones of Racetrack Playa: Self-Moving Rock Mystery Solved
The "sailing stones" of Racetrack Playa — a flat, dry lake bed in Death Valley National Park, California — are rocks, some weighing hundreds of kilograms, that have been observed to leave long trails (tracks) scored into
O_4_10 — Megafloods: Missoula, Altai, and Catastrophic Hydrology
Megafloods — catastrophic, high-discharge flooding events far exceeding any observed in historical times — have repeatedly reshaped Earth's surface, carving immense channels, depositing giant ripple marks and boulders, a
O_3_17 — Ocean Acoustic Phenomena: The Bloop, the 52-Hz Whale, and SOFAR Channel Mysteries
The ocean produces a rich acoustic environment, and several unexplained or initially mysterious sound detections have captured scientific and public attention since the deployment of deep-ocean hydrophone arrays. [KEY FI
O_3_01 — Biodiversity, Ecosystem Intelligence, and the Superorganism
Earth harbors an estimated 8.7 million eukaryotic species (Mora et al. 2011), of which only ~1.5-1.8 million have been formally described — meaning roughly 80% of species remain unknown to science. When prokaryotes (bact
O_3_02 — Sacred Water: Wells, Springs, and Purification Rites
Water occupies a unique position in human religious experience — simultaneously the substance of creation (primordial waters from which the cosmos emerged), the medium of purification (baptism, mikveh, wuḍūʾ), the portal
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