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 21 of 45
ZF_2_03 — Marine Migration Patterns and Cetacean Intelligence
Marine animals execute some of the most extraordinary navigational feats in biology — humpback whales migrating 8,000+ km between polar feeding grounds and tropical breeding waters, sea turtles returning to their natal b
ZF_3_12 — Submarines, Submersibles, and the History of Ocean Exploration
The history of ocean exploration technology spans from the earliest diving bells (Alexander the Great's legendary glass barrel, ~332 BCE; Halley's practical diving bell, 1690) to full-ocean-depth human-occupied vehicles
ZF_3_08 — Sunda Shelf and Southeast Asian Submerged Landscapes
The Sunda Shelf (or Sundaland) is one of Earth's largest continental shelves — an area of ~1.8 million km² (larger than the Indian subcontinent) that connects the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and Bali to peninsular
ZF_3_06 — Polynesian and Indigenous Ocean Knowledge
Indigenous and Pacific Islander communities have accumulated millennia of empirical ocean knowledge — encompassing navigation, marine ecology, fisheries management, weather prediction, tidal patterns, and ocean-land rela
ZF_3_15 — Tsunami Cultural Memory: Indigenous Oral Records and Ancient Warnings
Tsunami cultural memory reveals that indigenous and traditional communities have preserved remarkably accurate records of catastrophic ocean events — sometimes for centuries or millennia — through oral traditions, storie
ZF_3_18 — Microplastic Pollution in the Ocean
Microplastics — plastic particles <5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean, present from surface waters to the deepest hadal trenches, from Arctic sea ice to
ZF_3_14 — History of Oceanography: Challenger to Satellites
The history of oceanography traces humanity's evolving understanding of the oceans from ancient seafaring observations to the modern era of satellite remote sensing and autonomous floats. The discipline emerged as a reco
ZF_5_01 — Autonomous Underwater Vehicles and Ocean Exploration Technology
Ocean exploration technology — from early human-occupied submersibles to modern autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) — has progressively opened the deep ocean to scientific investigation, driving transformative discover
ZF_5_20 — Wallace Line: Biogeographic Boundary and Deep-Time Distribution Patterns
The Wallace Line is a biogeographic boundary running through the Malay Archipelago, separating the fauna of Asia (Sunda Shelf) from that of Australasia (Sahul Shelf). First identified by Alfred Russel Wallace during his
ZF_5_03 — Marine Protected Areas: Conservation Zones, No-Take Reserves, and Effectiveness
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are designated ocean regions where human activity is restricted or managed to conserve biodiversity, protect habitats, and sustain marine resources. Ranging from lightly managed multiple-use
ZF_5_12 — Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum: Ancient Anoxic Ocean Crisis
The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), occurring approximately 55.8 million years ago (latest Paleocene), was one of the most dramatic and rapid climate change events in the Cenozoic, offering the closest geologica
ZF_5_04 — Aquaculture: Fish Farming, Mariculture, and Blue Revolution
Aquaculture — the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and seaweed — has become the fastest-growing food production sector in the world and now provides more seafood for human consumption
ZF_5_08 — Coastal Geomorphology: Erosion, Beaches, and Barrier Islands
Coastal geomorphology is the study of landforms at the interface of land and sea — a dynamic zone shaped by the constant interaction of waves, tides, currents, wind, rivers, geology, biology, and increasingly by human ac
ZF_5_14 — Marine Invertebrate Venoms: Cone Snails, Box Jellyfish, and Blue-Ringed Octopus
The oceans harbor an extraordinary diversity of venomous organisms — from the microscopic nematocysts (stinging cells) of cnidarians to the sophisticated venom injection systems of cone snails, blue-ringed octopuses, and
ZF_4_03 — Desalination and Ocean Water Resources
Desalination — the removal of dissolved salts from seawater or brackish water to produce freshwater — has become an increasingly critical technology as global freshwater demand rises and climate change intensifies drough
ZF_4_06 — Ocean Remote Sensing and Satellite Oceanography
Satellite oceanography — the use of Earth-orbiting sensors to observe ocean properties from space — has transformed ocean science since the 1970s from a data-sparse field reliant on sparse ship transects to a globally co
ZF_4_07 — Deep Ocean Mining and Mineral Resources
Deep-sea mining — the extraction of mineral resources from the ocean floor at depths of 200–6,000 m — is one of the most consequential and contested environmental issues in contemporary oceanography. Three primary resour
ZF_4_10 — Coral as Climate Archive — Paleoceanographic Proxies
Coral paleoclimatology uses the geochemical and physical properties of coral skeletons as high-resolution archives of past ocean conditions — providing some of the most detailed tropical climate records available for the
ZF_1_13 — Continental Shelves: Submerged Geography and Ice Age Coastlines
Continental shelves — the shallow, gently sloping underwater extensions of continental landmasses — represent some of the most biologically productive, economically valuable, and archaeologically significant terrain on E
ZF_1_09 — Thermohaline Circulation and Ocean Conveyor
The thermohaline circulation (THC) — often called the "global ocean conveyor belt" — is the large-scale, density-driven system of deep ocean currents that redistributes heat, salt, carbon, and nutrients throughout the wo
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