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.

395 results for "dead sea scrolls" — page 13 of 20

Verified

INTERDOC_43 — Cancer Research Synthesis: Why Treatments Work, Why They Fail, and What May Cure It

Cancer is the second-leading cause of death globally, claiming approximately 10 million lives per year, yet mortality has decreased 33% in the United States since its 1991 peak. This synthesis connects 15+ documents acro

cancer oncology immunotherapy chemotherapy CRISPR venom medicine
Credible

INTERDOC_22 — Near-Death Experience, Afterlife Belief, and Cross-Cultural Evidence

[KEY FINDING] The AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation) study — a four-year prospective study across 15 hospitals in the UK, US, and Austria, led by Sam Parnia (published 2014, Resuscitation) — found that 39% of 140 car

near-death experience NDE afterlife out-of-body experience cardiac arrest AWARE study

InterDoc: Productive Fictions — Real Effects from Nonexistent Referents

productive fictions false theories phlogiston caloric luminiferous aether imaginary numbers
Credible

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

volcanic winter Bronze Age collapse Thera eruption Minoan civilization Late Bronze Age 1177 BCE
Credible

Catastrophe_Migration_Civilization_Cycle

The archaeological and paleoclimatic record reveals at least five major catastrophe-migration cycles in the last ~75,000 years, each following a recognizable pattern: a sudden environmental shock (volcanic eruption, cosm

Younger Dryas cataclysm migration civilization collapse Bronze Age collapse volcanic winter
Credible

INTERDOC_17 — Navigation, Seafaring, and the Lost Maritime Web

The Austronesian expansion — beginning ~3500 BCE from Taiwan and reaching Madagascar (~500 CE), Hawaii (~1000 CE), and New Zealand (~1250 CE) — represents the greatest sustained maritime achievement of the pre-modern wor

ancient navigation Polynesian wayfinding Marshall Islands stick chart Phoenician circumnavigation maritime archaeology Austronesian expansion
ZB_2_07 Ecology & Biology

ZB_2_07 — Bioluminescence: Living Light in Nature

Bioluminescence — the production and emission of light by living organisms — is one of life's most extraordinary and widespread adaptations. It has evolved independently at least 94 times across the tree of life, from ba

bioluminescence luciferin luciferase aequorin GFP green fluorescent protein
ZB_1_09 Ecology & Biology

ZB_1_09 — Tool Use in Animals

Tool use — defined as the deployment of an external object to alter the form, position, or condition of another object or organism — was once considered uniquely human. Since Jane Goodall's 1960 observation of chimpanzee

tool use animal cognition crow New Caledonian crow chimpanzee orangutan
ZB_1_03 Ecology & Biology

ZB_1_03 — Animal Navigation and Migration — Magnetism, Stars, and Memory

Animal migration and navigation represent some of the most astonishing feats in biology: monarch butterflies traveling 4,000 km across North America using a time-compensated sun compass; Arctic terns completing 71,000-km

animal navigation migration monarch butterfly Arctic tern magnetoreception cryptochrome
ZB_5_01 Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_01 — Biological Rhythms Beyond Circadian

While circadian (~24-hour) rhythms are the best-studied biological oscillations (2017 Nobel Prize to Hall, Rosbash, Young), life is permeated by rhythms operating across all timescales — from millisecond neural oscillati

biological rhythms ultradian rhythms infradian rhythms circannual rhythms tidal rhythms lunar rhythms
ZB_5_24 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_24 — Bioluminescence: Light Production in Living Systems

Bioluminescence — the production of light by living organisms through chemical reactions — is one of nature's most widespread and ancient phenomena. An estimated 76% of deep-sea organisms produce light, and bioluminescen

bioluminescence luciferin luciferase deep sea firefly dinoflagellate
ZB_5_30 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_30 — Phosphorus Cycle: Biogeochemistry, Eutrophication, and the Coming Scarcity Crisis

Phosphorus (P) is the rate-limiting nutrient for life on Earth — essential to DNA, RNA, ATP (the universal energy currency), cell membranes (phospholipids), and bone (hydroxyapatite), yet available in nature only through

phosphorus cycle phosphorus scarcity peak phosphorus eutrophication biogeochemistry fertilizer
ZB_3_07 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_3_07 — Keystone Species and Trophic Cascades

A keystone species exerts an ecological influence disproportionate to its abundance — its removal causes cascading structural changes through the ecosystem. The concept was introduced by Robert Paine (1966, 1969) based o

keystone species trophic cascade top-down regulation food web apex predator ecological engineer
ZB_3_20 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_3_20 — Kelp Forest Ecology

Kelp forests are underwater ecosystems formed by dense stands of large brown macroalgae (Order Laminariales), predominantly species of Macrocystis (giant kelp, reaching heights of 45–60 meters — among the fastest-growing

kelp forest Macrocystis Laminaria sea urchin trophic cascade otter
ZC_3_02 Verified Social Science

ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge

Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi

sociology of science sociology of knowledge Merton Kuhn social construction SSK
ZC_4_04 Verified Social Science

ZC_4_04 — Medical Anthropology — Culture, Healing, and the Body

Medical anthropology — the study of how health, illness, healing, and the body are experienced, understood, and managed across cultures — is one of anthropology's most productive subfields, bridging biological and social

medical anthropology healing illness disease sickness culture
G_4_19 Credible Modern Frameworks

G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment

Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c

oral tradition oral history folklore ethnographic record cultural memory mythological kernel
G_4_14 Verified Modern Frameworks

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

replication crisis reproducibility p-hacking HARKing publication bias open science
G_4_17 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_4_17 — Microbiome Archaeology — Ancient Gut and Soil Microbes

Microbiome archaeology — the extraction and analysis of ancient microbial communities from archaeological materials (dental calculus, coprolites, mummified remains, soil sediments, ceramics) — has emerged since ~2012 as

microbiome ancient microbiome dental calculus paleomicrobiology metagenomics coprolite
G_1_11 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_1_11 — Underwater Remote Sensing — Multibeam, Magnetometry, Sub-Bottom Profiling

Underwater remote sensing encompasses a suite of geophysical survey technologies — multibeam echosounder (MBES), side-scan sonar (SSS), magnetometry, and sub-bottom profiler (SBP) — that enable archaeologists, oceanograp

underwater remote sensing multibeam sonar bathymetry magnetometry sub-bottom profiling