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.
1,297 results for "da Vinci" — page 2 of 65
U_1_14 — World Dance Traditions: Ballet, Bharatanatyam, Flamenco, and Hula
Dance — the oldest art form, predating language, visual art, and music in some theoretical models — is the organization of human movement in time and space for expressive, ritual, social, or aesthetic purposes. Every kno
X_5_02 — Medical Illustration and Anatomical Art
Medical illustration and anatomical art — the visual representation of the human body for scientific and educational purposes — is a discipline where art and science converge with extraordinary results. The ability to ac
X_5_11 — Medical Illustration: Visualizing the Body Across Centuries
Medical illustration — the art and science of creating visual representations of the human body, diseases, surgical procedures, and biological processes for education, research, and clinical communication — is a discipli
X_3_01 — Surgical History: From Trepanation to Robotics
Surgery — the physical opening and manipulation of the body to treat disease, injury, or deformity — has one of the longest and most dramatic histories in medicine. Prehistory: trepanation (trephination) — cutting or bor
X_3_13 — Microsurgery and Modern Surgical Innovation
Microsurgery — surgery performed under magnification (operating microscope or loupes) with specialized instruments on structures smaller than can be effectively manipulated by the naked eye — and the broader field of mod
W_1_13 — Mesopotamian Daily Life and Urban Civilization
Beyond the well-known temples, ziggurats, and royal inscriptions, the cuneiform record preserves an extraordinarily detailed picture of everyday Mesopotamian life spanning over 3,000 years. Tens of thousands of clay tabl
W_5_28 — Tairona Civilization and Ciudad Perdida
The Tairona were a complex chiefdom-level society that flourished in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountains of northern Colombia from approximately 200 CE to the Spanish conquest (~1600 CE). Their most spectacular ac
ZH_4_16 — Lunar Mythology: Moon as Deity, Calendar, and Symbol Worldwide
The Moon — the most visible and rhythmically changing celestial body — has been a central object of mythology, worship, and symbolic elaboration in virtually every human culture. The 29.5-day synodic cycle (new moon to n
ZH_3_06 — Andean Dark Constellations and Milky Way Astronomy
Andean astronomical traditions, particularly as documented in Quechua-speaking communities of Peru and Bolivia and inferred from colonial-era Spanish accounts of Inca cosmology, are distinguished by a feature unique in w
ZH_5_20 — Maya Calendar Systems: Cycles of Time and Cosmic Order
The Maya calendar system represents one of the most sophisticated timekeeping frameworks developed by any civilization, integrating multiple interlocking cycles to track sacred, civil, agricultural, and cosmic time over
ZH_1_13 — Bronze Age Astronomy: Alignments, Calendars, and Knowledge 2000–1000 BCE
The Bronze Age (broadly ~3300–1200 BCE, with regional variation) witnessed a decisive transformation in astronomical knowledge — from the horizon-based, monument-encoded astronomy of the Neolithic to the beginning of sys
ZH_1_05 — Eclipse Records: Astronomical Dating and Historical Anchors
Eclipse records — observations of solar and lunar eclipses preserved in ancient and medieval texts — are among the most scientifically valuable artifacts of pre-modern astronomy. Because eclipses are precisely calculable
C_5_22 — Calendar Cosmology: How Ancient Civilizations Encoded the Universe in Time
Calendar cosmology — the encoding of cosmological beliefs, mythological narratives, and astronomical observations into calendrical systems — is a universal feature of complex civilizations. Every major culture developed
ZF_5_18 — Wave & Tidal Energy
Wave and tidal energy — the extraction of electrical power from ocean surface waves and gravitational tidal flows — represent a vast but largely untapped renewable energy resource: the International Energy Agency (IEA) e
ZF_1_02 — Tidal Science: Lunar Cycles, Tidal Locking, and Tidal Energy
Tides — the rhythmic rise and fall of ocean surfaces — are among the most predictable natural phenomena on Earth, driven primarily by the gravitational attraction of the Moon (accounting for ~68% of tidal forcing) and th
K_5_11 — Synaesthesia and Consciousness: Cross-Modal Binding
Synaesthesia (British spelling; "synesthesia" in American English) is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers an involuntary experience in a second, unstim
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_16 — Cosmogenic Isotope Dating: Beryllium-10 and Exposure Ages
Cosmogenic nuclide dating (also called cosmogenic exposure dating or terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide, TCN, dating) is a geochronological method that determines how long a rock surface has been exposed at or near Earth's s
E_4_15 — Thermoluminescence and OSL Dating: Beyond Radiocarbon
Thermoluminescence (TL) and Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating are trapped-charge geochronological techniques that determine the time elapsed since a mineral grain (typically quartz or feldspar) was last expo
E_4_12 — Dendrochronology: Tree-Ring Science and Precise Ancient Dating
Dendrochronology — the science of dating based on the analysis of tree-ring growth patterns — is one of the most precise dating methods available to archaeology, climatology, and ecology. Pioneered by Andrew Ellicott Dou
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