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.

795 results for "speech act" — page 27 of 40

F_1_01 Lost Connections

F_1_01 — Trans-Oceanic Contact

Mainstream history asserts that the Americas were isolated from the Old World from ~11,000 BCE until Columbus (1492 CE), with the exception of brief Norse contact (~1000 CE). However, chemical evidence (cocaine and nicot

trans-oceanic Balabanova cocaine nicotine mummies Polynesian
F_1_26 Credible Lost Connections

F_1_26 — Pre-Columbian Chicken DNA & Trans-Pacific Contact

The question of whether chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) were present in South America before the arrival of Europeans in 1492 is a seemingly mundane zoological problem with profound implications for the history of pr

chicken Gallus gallus pre-Columbian Polynesian South America Araucana
F_1_25 Speculative Lost Connections

F_1_25 — Roman-Era Artifacts in the Americas

The claim that Roman-era artifacts have been found in the Americas — suggesting trans-Atlantic contact between the Roman world and pre-Columbian civilizations — is a recurring theme in diffusionist and alternative archae

Roman pre-Columbian Tecaxic-Calixtlahuaca amphorae coins terracotta
F_1_10 Verified Lost Connections

F_1_10 — Kennewick Man and the Pre-Clovis Debate

The question of when and how humans first reached the Americas has been one of archaeology's most contentious debates for over a century. For decades, the Clovis First model dominated: the earliest Americans were big-gam

Kennewick Man Ancient One pre-Clovis Clovis first first Americans NAGPRA
F_1_24 Speculative Lost Connections

F_1_24 — Phoenician Contact with the Americas

The hypothesis that Phoenician or Carthaginian sailors reached the Americas before Columbus is one of the most persistent and emotionally charged claims in the field of pre-Columbian transatlantic contact — a proposition

Phoenician Carthaginian pre-Columbian transatlantic Paraíba inscription Bat Creek
F_2_19 Verified Lost Connections

F_2_19 — Obsidian Trade Networks in the Ancient World

Obsidian — volcanic glass formed by rapid cooling of silica-rich lava — was the most extensively traded lithic material in the ancient world, coveted for its conchoidal fracture producing edges sharper than modern surgic

obsidian trade network sourcing XRF neutron activation Çatalhöyük
F_4_20 Verified Lost Connections

F_4_20 — Yamnaya Expansion: Steppe Herders and Indo-European Spread

The Yamnaya culture (c. 3300–2600 BCE) — a semi-nomadic pastoral society of the Pontic-Caspian steppe (modern Ukraine, southern Russia, and western Kazakhstan) — has emerged from ancient DNA studies as one of the most co

Yamnaya steppe Pontic-Caspian Indo-European migration pastoralism
F_3_13 Credible Lost Connections

F_3_13 — Cave Art Networks — Ice Age Information Highways

Ice Age cave art — the painted, engraved, and sculpted images found in deep caves across Europe, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere, dating from the Upper Paleolithic (~45,000–10,000 BP) — is the oldest known evidence of comp

cave art parietal art rock art Upper Paleolithic Ice Age Pleistocene
F_3_17 Credible Lost Connections

F_3_17 — Megalithic Diffusion Debate: Atlantic Façade Connections

The megalithic diffusion debate is one of archaeology's longest-running controversies: did the remarkable concentrations of megalithic monuments (dolmens, passage tombs, standing stones, stone circles, alignments, and ch

megalith diffusion Atlantic façade standing stone dolmen passage tomb
F_3_20 Credible Lost Connections

F_3_20 — Pottery Diffusion Patterns: Ceramic Technology Transfer Across Ancient Civilizations

Pottery — humanity's first synthetic material, created by irreversibly transforming clay through firing at 500–1,200°C — serves as the single most abundant and informative artifact class in archaeology, providing evidenc

pottery diffusion ceramic technology Lapita Jomon Cardial Ware Bell Beaker
ZA_2_06 Physics & Quantum

ZA_2_06 — Spacetime Geometry: Minkowski, Causal Structure, and Light Cones

Spacetime — the four-dimensional continuum unifying space and time — is the arena in which all physics takes place. Einstein's special relativity (1905) revealed that space and time are not separate absolutes but are int

spacetime Minkowski spacetime special relativity light cone causal structure worldline
ZA_2_03 Physics & Quantum

ZA_2_03 — General and Special Relativity — Einstein's Revolution

Albert Einstein's two theories of relativity — special (1905) and general (1915) — fundamentally reshaped the understanding of space, time, mass, energy, and gravity. Special relativity, built on Lorentz invariance and t

special relativity general relativity Einstein Lorentz invariance E=mc² time dilation
ZA_1_06 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_06 — Quantum Tunneling: Traversing the Classically Forbidden

Quantum tunneling is the phenomenon where particles traverse energy barriers that classical physics strictly forbids — a direct consequence of quantum mechanics' wave-like description of matter. First explained by George

quantum tunneling barrier penetration wave function probability amplitude alpha decay Gamow
ZA_1_15 Credible Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_15 — Quantum Biology Revisited: Quantum Effects in Living Systems

Quantum biology investigates whether non-trivial quantum-mechanical effects — coherence, entanglement, tunneling, and superposition — play functional roles in biological processes, rather than being washed out by the war

quantum biology photosynthesis coherence magnetoreception enzyme tunneling olfaction FMO complex
ZA_1_01 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_01 — Quantum Entanglement and Non-Locality Deep Dive

Quantum entanglement — the phenomenon whereby two or more particles become correlated such that the quantum state of each cannot be described independently — is one of the most experimentally confirmed and conceptually d

quantum entanglement non-locality EPR paradox Bell's theorem Bell inequality Aspect experiment
ZA_1_04 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_04 — Electroweak Unification: The Weak Nuclear Force

The electroweak theory, developed by Glashow (1961), Weinberg (1967), and Salam (1968), unifies electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force into a single gauge framework — SU(2)L × U(1)Y. The weak force, responsible for

electroweak theory weak force weak interaction W boson Z boson beta decay
ZA_1_03 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_03 — Quantum Chromodynamics: The Strong Nuclear Force

Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of the strong nuclear force — the interaction that binds quarks into protons and neutrons and holds atomic nuclei together. Unlike electromagnetism, the strong force is mediated

quantum chromodynamics QCD strong force strong interaction color charge gluon
ZA_1_07 Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_07 — EPR Paradox and Bell Tests: Quantum Nonlocality

The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox, proposed in 1935, challenged quantum mechanics by arguing that entangled particles have definite properties prior to measurement — implying quantum mechanics is incomplete and s

EPR paradox Bell inequality Bell theorem quantum entanglement quantum nonlocality hidden variables
ZA_1_22 Verified Physics & Quantum

ZA_1_22 — Observer Effect in Quantum Mechanics

The observer effect in quantum mechanics refers to the fundamental principle that measuring a quantum system inevitably disturbs it, and more profoundly, that the act of measurement appears to force a quantum system from

observer effect measurement problem wave function collapse decoherence Heisenberg uncertainty quantum measurement
ZA_5_06 Credible Physics & Quantum

ZA_5_06 — Quantum Thermodynamics: Heat, Work, and Entropy at the Quantum Scale

Quantum thermodynamics — the study of heat, work, entropy, and thermodynamic processes in systems where quantum-mechanical effects (superposition, entanglement, coherence, discreteness of energy levels) are significant —

quantum thermodynamics quantum heat engine Landauer principle Maxwell demon fluctuation theorem quantum coherence