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.
3,569 results for "de re publica" — page 134 of 179
Z_5_23 — Gene Drives: CRISPR-Based Inheritance Manipulation and Ecological Engineering
A gene drive is a genetic engineering technology that biases inheritance in sexually reproducing organisms, causing a modified gene to spread through a population at rates far exceeding normal Mendelian inheritance (~50%
Z_3_13 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Prokaryotes
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) — the movement of genetic material between organisms outside of parent-to-offspring inheritance — is a dominant force shaping prokaryotic evolution, fundamentally challenging the traditiona
Z_2_21 — Epigenetic Aging Clocks
Epigenetic aging clocks are mathematical models that use patterns of DNA methylation at specific CpG dinucleotides across the genome to estimate an individual's biological age with remarkable accuracy — typically within
Z_2_06 — Nutrigenomics and Diet-Gene Interactions
Nutrigenomics — the study of how genetic variation influences nutritional requirements, dietary responses, and disease susceptibility — and its complement nutrigenetics (how diet influences gene expression) represent a r
Z_2_00 — Medical Genetics Health: Subfolder Summary
Z_2_20 — Prion Molecular Biology
At the molecular level, prion diseases arise from the conversion of the normal cellular prion protein (PrPᶜ) into a misfolded, aggregation-prone conformer (PrPˢᶜ) through a process that remains one of the most extraordin
Z_1_08 — Transposons and Mobile Genetic Elements
Transposable elements (TEs, transposons) — segments of DNA that can move or copy themselves to new genomic locations — are among the most abundant and influential components of eukaryotic genomes. Discovered by Barbara M
Z_1_16 — Transposable Elements: Jumping Genes and Genome Evolution
Transposable elements (TEs) — sequences of DNA capable of moving ("jumping") from one genomic location to another — constitute approximately 45% of the human genome and up to 85% of the maize genome, making them the sing
Z_1_21 — Riboswitches and RNA Thermometers
Riboswitches are structured RNA elements typically found in the 5' untranslated regions (5' UTRs) of bacterial messenger RNAs that directly sense and bind specific small-molecule metabolites — changing their three-dimens
Z_1_10 — Chromosome Evolution and Karyotype
Karyotype — the number, size, and morphology of chromosomes in a cell — varies enormously across species, from n=1 in the ant Myrmecia pilosula to n=630 in the fern Ophioglossum reticulatum. Humans have 2n=46 (23 pairs),
Z_4_21 — Autophagy Mechanisms
Autophagy (from Greek, "self-eating") is a fundamental cellular process by which eukaryotic cells degrade and recycle their own components — damaged organelles, protein aggregates, intracellular pathogens, and surplus cy
K_4_00 — Anomalous Esoteric: Subfolder Summary
K_5_05 — Consciousness and Information Integration: Phi and Its Critics
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by neuroscientist Giulio Tononi (b. 1960) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with significant contributions from Christof Koch (Allen Institute for Brain Scie
E_3_08 — Dansgaard-Oeschger Events and Abrupt Climate Change
Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events are rapid climate oscillations during the last glacial period (c. 115,000–11,700 years ago) characterized by abrupt warming of 5–16°C in Greenland within decades — among the most dramatic a
E_3_09 — Messinian Salinity Crisis
The Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) — approximately 5.96–5.33 million years ago (late Miocene) — was one of the most dramatic geological events in the Cenozoic: the near-complete desiccation (drying up) of the Mediterran
E_2_11 — Snowball Earth Hypothesis
The Snowball Earth hypothesis proposes that Earth's surface was entirely or nearly entirely covered by ice on at least two occasions during the Neoproterozoic era (c. 720–635 million years ago): the Sturtian glaciation (
E_2_22 — Dansgaard-Oeschger Events: Rapid Climate Oscillations of the Last Ice Age
Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) events are rapid climate oscillations that occurred during the last glacial period (~120,000–11,700 years BP), characterized by abrupt warmings of 8–16°C over Greenland within decades (as few as
E_4_11 — The Holocene Climate Optimum and Mid-Holocene Transition
The Holocene Climate Optimum (also called the Holocene Thermal Maximum or Hypsithermal) designates a prolonged warm interval roughly spanning 9,000–5,000 years before present, during which Northern Hemisphere summer temp
E_1_12 — Impact Winter Theory: Nuclear Winter and Chicxulub Parallels
The impact winter hypothesis describes the catastrophic global darkening and cooling that follows a major asteroid or comet impact, caused by the injection of vast quantities of dust, soot, and aerosols into the Earth's
E_1_14 — Supernovae in Human History: Crab Nebula, SN 1006, Vela
Supernovae — the catastrophic explosions of massive stars (core-collapse, Type II/Ib/Ic) or white dwarfs exceeding the Chandrasekhar mass limit (thermonuclear, Type Ia) — are among the most energetic events in the univer
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