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.
895 results for "Red Sea ports" — page 15 of 45
O_4_17 — Ley Lines
Ley lines are hypothetical alignments connecting ancient monuments, hilltops, and other significant landscape features along straight paths across the land. The concept was first articulated by Alfred Watkins (a Hereford
O_3_13 — Hydrothermal Vents: Black Smokers and Chemosynthetic Ecosystems
Hydrothermal vents are fissures on the ocean floor — overwhelmingly concentrated along mid-ocean ridges, back-arc basins, and submarine volcanic arcs — where geothermally heated water (up to ~400°C) erupts into the frigi
D_5_30 — Chichén Itzá: Maya Architecture, Astronomy, and Cultural Synthesis
Chichén Itzá, located in the northern Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, is one of the largest, most diverse, and most intensively studied Maya archaeological sites, occupied from approximately 600 CE through the Spanish Conqu
D_5_17 — Torus Geometry in Ancient Architecture
The torus — a doughnut-shaped surface of revolution generated by rotating a circle around an axis coplanar with the circle — is one of the most fundamental geometries in nature, appearing in magnetic field lines, fluid d
D_5_29 — The Djed Pillar: Stability, Resurrection, and the Backbone of Osiris
The Djed pillar is one of ancient Egypt's most pervasive and enigmatic symbols — an object resembling a column with four horizontal bars near its top, associated with stability (djed = "enduring/stable"), the god Osiris,
D_3_23 — Mohenjo-Daro: Unsolved Mysteries of the Indus Metropolis
Mohenjo-Daro (Sindhi: "Mound of the Dead") — located in the Larkana District of Sindh, Pakistan, on the right bank of the Indus River — was one of the two largest cities (alongside Harappa, ~600 km to the north) of the I
B_2_19 — Smithing and Craft Deities: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Smithing and craft deities occupy a distinctive mythological position across cultures: they are simultaneously among the most revered and most marginalized divine figures. Hephaestus (Greek), Vulcan (Roman), Ptah (Egypti
B_1_15 — Water Deities: Poseidon, Varuna, Tlaloc, Sedna, Mazu
Water deities — gods and goddesses governing oceans, rivers, rain, lakes, and springs — rule the element most essential to life and most capable of destruction. The Greek Poseidon (lord of the sea, earthquakes, and horse
B_1_16 — Healing Deities: Asclepius, Dhanvantari, Eir, Imhotep, Brigid
Healing deities — divine or deified figures who cure disease, protect health, and govern medical knowledge — represent the intersection of theology and medicine, two impulses inseparable in the ancient world. The Greek A
ZD_4_16 — Swarm Intelligence & Self-Organizing Systems: Decentralized Problem-Solving
Swarm intelligence (SI) — the emergent collective behavior of decentralized, self-organized systems in which simple agents following local rules produce globally intelligent, adaptive solutions without central control —
ZD_4_17 — Digital Twin Technology
A digital twin is a virtual representation of a physical object, process, or system that is continuously updated with real-time data from its physical counterpart through sensors and IoT connectivity, enabling simulation
L_4_07 — Twin Studies and Heritability
Twin studies represent one of the most powerful natural experiments in human genetics, exploiting the fact that monozygotic (MZ, "identical") twins share ~100% of their DNA while dizygotic (DZ, "fraternal") twins share ~
Y_5_16 — Breathwork Traditions: Pranayama, Holotropic, Tummo & Physiological Mechanisms
Deliberate manipulation of breathing patterns — breathwork — represents one of humanity's oldest and most cross-culturally widespread technologies for inducing altered states of consciousness, modulating autonomic functi
Y_5_18 — Sensory Deprivation & Float Tanks
Sensory deprivation — the systematic reduction or elimination of external sensory input — has been studied scientifically since the 1950s, with two primary paradigms: chamber REST (Restricted Environmental Stimulation Te
Y_5_14 — Drumming and Rhythmic Entrainment: Percussive Paths to Trance
Drumming and rhythmic entrainment — the use of sustained, repetitive percussive sound to alter consciousness — is one of the oldest and most universal methods of inducing trance states across human cultures. From the fra
Y_3_17 — Breathwork Traditions: Pranayama, Holotropic Breathing, and Respiratory Consciousness
Breathwork — the intentional manipulation of breathing patterns to influence physiological, psychological, and (in traditional frameworks) spiritual states — encompasses ancient practices dating to the earliest recorded
Y_1_12 — Salvia Divinorum: Mazatec Sage and Kappa-Opioid Visionary
Salvia divinorum ("diviner's sage") is a psychoactive plant of the mint family (Lamiaceae) native to the cloud forests of the Sierra Mazateca in Oaxaca, Mexico, where it has been used for centuries by Mazatec healers and
Y_1_08 — Cannabis: History, Ethnobotany, and Pharmacology
Cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.) is one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants, with a relationship spanning at least 12,000 years based on archaeological evidence. Its use as fiber (hemp), food (seeds), medicine, and psych
P_2_18 — Bioethics Frameworks
Bioethics is the interdisciplinary field that examines ethical questions arising from advances in biology, medicine, and biotechnology. The field emerged as a distinct discipline in the early 1970s, catalyzed by public r
N_2_12 — Templar Banking and Financial Innovation
The Knights Templar (formally the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, founded c. 1119 CE) are primarily remembered as warrior-monks of the Crusades, but their most enduring historical legacy may
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