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.
207 results for "Earth school" — page 3 of 11
R_1_09 — The Great Oxidation Event: Oxygen, Cyanobacteria, and Earth's Atmospheric Transformation
The Great Oxidation Event (GOE), occurring approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago during the Paleoproterozoic, was the most dramatic chemical transformation in Earth's history — atmospheric oxygen rose from trace levels
I_3_13 — The Zimbabwe Ariel School Encounter
On September 16, 1994, approximately 62 schoolchildren (ages 5-12) at the Ariel School in Ruwa, Zimbabwe (a small farming community ~20 km from Harare), reported witnessing one or more unusual craft land or hover near th
V_2_05 — Calculus & Infinitesimals: Newton, Leibniz & the Kerala School
Calculus — the mathematics of continuous change — is arguably the most powerful intellectual tool ever created, enabling the scientific revolution, modern physics, engineering, economics, and computation.
ZH_3_10 — North American Mound Builders and Celestial Alignments
The mound-building cultures of eastern North America — spanning from Poverty Point (~1700 BCE) through the Adena (~800–100 BCE), Hopewell (~100 BCE–500 CE), Fort Ancient (~1000–1650 CE), and Mississippian (~800–1500 CE)
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
O_1_05 — Hessdalen Lights — Scientific Monitoring of Persistent Anomaly
The Hessdalen lights are recurring luminous aerial phenomena observed in and around the Hessdalen valley in central Norway (Holtålen municipality, Trøndelag county), scientifically monitored since 1983.
O_1_06 — Geomagnetic Anomalies at Ancient Megalithic Sites
A small but growing body of geophysical research has documented measurable electromagnetic and geomagnetic anomalies at several ancient megalithic sites, including the Rollright Stones (Oxfordshire, England), Carnac (Bri
O_1_09 — Persinger's Tectonic Strain Theory and Geomagnetic Anomalies
Michael Persinger (1945–2018), a neuroscientist at Laurentian University (Sudbury, Ontario), developed the Tectonic Strain Theory (TST) — a hypothesis proposing that stress accumulating along geological fault zones produ
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_01 — Biodiversity, Ecosystem Intelligence, and the Superorganism
Earth harbors an estimated 8.7 million eukaryotic species (Mora et al. 2011), of which only ~1.5-1.8 million have been formally described — meaning roughly 80% of species remain unknown to science. When prokaryotes (bact
P_4_15 — Japanese Philosophy: Zen, Bushido, Wabi-Sabi, Mono no Aware
Japanese philosophy encompasses a rich, distinctive tradition that has woven together indigenous Shinto concepts (sacredness of nature, ritual purity, musubi — the vital creative force), continental imports from Chinese
I_1_05 — The Scientific Study of Anomalous Atmospheric Phenomena
A range of rare atmospheric phenomena — ball lightning, earthquake lights, transient luminous events (sprites, elves, blue jets), and persistent luminous anomalies such as the Hessdalen lights — have been observed for ce
M_5_18 — Mound Builders: Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian, and the Erasure of Indigenous Achievement
The "Mound Builders" refers to the diverse Indigenous North American cultures that constructed elaborate earthen mounds across eastern North America from approximately 3700 BCE (Watson Brake, Louisiana) through European
U_3_14 — Vernacular Architecture: Indigenous, Anti-Colonial, and Resistance Design
Vernacular architecture — buildings designed and constructed by their inhabitants or local builders using traditional techniques, local materials, and accumulated environmental knowledge, without the intervention of prof
U_2_11 — Landscape Painting: Shanshui, Hudson River, and the Natural Sublime
Landscape painting — the artistic representation of natural scenery — is among the most culturally revealing genres in the history of art, because the way a culture depicts nature reveals its deepest assumptions about th
X_2_09 — Veterinary Medicine and Animal Healing History
Veterinary medicine — the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease in non-human animals — is one of the oldest branches of medical practice, arising alongside animal domestication (dogs ~15,000 BP; sheep/goats ~10
X_2_10 — Bioelectromagnetic Medicine — Evidence and Controversy
Bioelectromagnetic medicine occupies an unusual position in the medical landscape — a field in which rigorously validated clinical applications (PEMF for bone healing, TMS for depression) coexist with a vast fringe of un
X_4_12 — Tropical Medicine: Disease, Ecology, and Global Health in the Tropics
Tropical medicine is the branch of medicine concerned with diseases that are prevalent or unique to tropical and subtropical regions — particularly vector-borne diseases (malaria, dengue, yellow fever, Chagas disease, le
W_1_01 — Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism
The Olmec civilization (~1500–400 BCE), centered in the tropical lowlands of Mexico's Gulf Coast (modern Veracruz and Tabasco), is widely considered the "mother culture" of Mesoamerica — the civilization from which later
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
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