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 36 of 65
Catastrophe_Migration_Civilization_Cycle
The archaeological and paleoclimatic record reveals at least five major catastrophe-migration cycles in the last ~75,000 years, each following a recognizable pattern: a sudden environmental shock (volcanic eruption, cosm
INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe
The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c
Ancient_Engineering_Modern_Science
The application of modern scientific instruments and methods to ancient construction has produced a body of data that simultaneously confirms the ingenuity of ancient builders within known frameworks and identifies speci
INTERDOC_16 — Metallurgy, Alchemy, and the Chemistry Thread
The transformation of raw ore into metal was among humanity's most consequential discoveries. Copper smelting appeared by ~5500 BCE at sites like Belovode (Serbia) and Çatalhöyük (Anatolia). Bronze (copper-tin alloy) eme
ZB_2_16 — Tardigrades: Biology of Indestructibility
Tardigrades (phylum Tardigrada, ~1,400 described species) — commonly called "water bears" or "moss piglets" — are microscopic invertebrates (0.1–1.5 mm) renowned for their extraordinary tolerance to environmental extreme
ZB_2_14 — Photosynthesis Evolution and Diversity
Photosynthesis — the conversion of light energy into chemical energy — is arguably the most important biochemical process on Earth, responsible for virtually all atmospheric oxygen and the primary energy input for nearly
ZB_2_25 — Short-Chain Fatty Acids: Microbial Metabolites and Host Signaling
Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) — predominantly acetate (C2), propionate (C3), and butyrate (C4) — are the principal metabolites produced by anaerobic bacterial fermentation of dietary fiber in the mammalian colon, reach
ZB_2_15 — Carnivorous Plants: Evolution, Mechanisms, and Ecology
Carnivorous plants — approximately 800 species across at least 12 independently evolved lineages — have evolved the capacity to attract, capture, and digest animal prey (primarily arthropods) to supplement nutrient acqui
ZB_1_14 — Animal Architecture: Nests, Webs, Mounds, and Biological Engineering
Animal architecture — the construction of physical structures by non-human organisms for shelter, reproduction, thermoregulation, prey capture, mate attraction, or environmental modification — represents one of the most
ZB_1_02 — Social Insects — Superorganisms and Collective Intelligence
Social insects — ants, bees, wasps, and termites — represent one of evolution's most spectacular innovations: the subordination of individual reproduction to colony-level organization, producing "superorganisms" capable
ZB_1_06 — Camouflage, Mimicry, and Biological Deception
Camouflage and mimicry represent some of evolution's most sophisticated solutions to the problems of predation and survival. Animals employ an extraordinary toolkit: background matching, disruptive coloration, countersha
ZB_1_10 — Sound Communication and Animal Vocalization
Sound communication is one of the most versatile and widespread signaling modalities in the animal kingdom, spanning frequencies from infrasound (elephants: ~14 Hz, traveling kilometers through air and ground) to ultraso
ZB_1_07 — Echolocation: Biological Sonar in Bats, Dolphins, and Beyond
Echolocation — the ability to perceive the environment by emitting sounds and analyzing returning echoes — has evolved independently in bats, toothed whales (dolphins, porpoises, sperm whales), some birds (oilbirds, swif
ZB_5_14 — Conservation Biology
Conservation biology — the scientific study of biodiversity loss and the methods to protect species, habitats, and ecosystems — was formally established as a discipline by Michael Soulé (University of California, San Die
ZB_5_15 — Citizen Science in Ecology: Participatory Research and Large-Scale Biodiversity Monitoring
Citizen science — the participation of non-professional volunteers in scientific research — has become an indispensable component of modern ecology, generating datasets of unprecedented spatial and temporal scale that no
ZB_5_13 — Ecological Economics: Valuing Nature's Services
Ecological economics is a transdisciplinary field that treats the human economy as a subsystem embedded within — and fundamentally dependent upon — the finite biophysical systems of the Earth, challenging the neoclassica
ZB_5_01 — Biological Rhythms Beyond Circadian
While circadian (~24-hour) rhythms are the best-studied biological oscillations (2017 Nobel Prize to Hall, Rosbash, Young), life is permeated by rhythms operating across all timescales — from millisecond neural oscillati
ZB_5_08 — Seed Ecology: Dispersal, Dormancy, and Germination
Seed ecology encompasses the study of how seeds are produced, dispersed, stored, and germinated — processes that fundamentally shape plant population dynamics, community composition, vegetation patterns, and ecosystem st
ZB_5_20 — Citizen Science: Public Participation in Scientific Research
Citizen science — also termed community science, participatory science, or public participation in scientific research (PPSR) — involves non-professional volunteers in systematic data collection, analysis, or interpretat
ZB_5_06 — Mass Extinction Ecology: Catastrophe, Recovery, and Evolutionary Reset
Mass extinctions — episodes in which >75% of species disappear within a geologically brief interval — have profoundly shaped the history of life on Earth, acting as ecological and evolutionary resets that eliminate domin
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