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.
2,480 results for "Brú na Bóinne" — page 37 of 124
INTERDOC_29 — Sacred Number, Geometry, and Architecture
The golden ratio (φ = 1.6180339...) — defined as the ratio where the whole is to the larger part as the larger part is to the smaller — appears in: the Parthenon façade (debated — Markowsky, 1992, argues the measurements
INTERDOC_28 — The Death-Rebirth Universal Pattern
The death-rebirth motif appears in every known mythological system: Osiris (Egyptian — murdered by Set, dismembered, reassembled by Isis, resurrected as lord of the afterlife, ~2400 BCE in Pyramid Texts), Inanna/Ishtar (
INTERDOC_12 — The Denisovan Ghost Population Puzzle
In 2010, Svante Pääbo's team at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology sequenced DNA from a tiny finger bone fragment found in Denisova Cave, Altai Mountains, Siberia, and discovered an entirely new homin
INTERDOC_11 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam, and the Convergence Problem
Mitochondrial Eve — the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all living humans through an unbroken maternal line — was identified through mtDNA analysis by Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson at UC Berkeley i
Ocean_Climate_Civilization_Nexus
The relationship between ocean systems and human civilization is one of the most consequential and least integrated topics in historical analysis — most conventional histories treat the ocean as a static background, when
INTERDOC_19 — Cosmic Impact, Mythology, and Cultural Memory
[KEY FINDING] The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) — first proposed by Richard Firestone, Allen West, and Simon Warwick-Smith (2006–2007) — argues that a cosmic impact or airburst event ~12,800 BP triggered the You
INTERDOC_57 — Cascade Pattern Across Civilization Resets
Three civilization-altering events — the Younger Dryas climate reversal (c. 12,800 years ago), the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1177 BCE), and the Justinianic Plague (541–549 CE and centuries of recurrence) — share struc
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_15 — Astronomical Alignment as Global Pattern
Human civilizations on every inhabited continent independently developed monumental architecture precisely aligned to astronomical events — solstices, equinoxes, cardinal directions, and specific stellar risings. Newgran
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
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
Archaic_Knowledge_Continuity
This cross-section synthesis document traces how specific technical, cosmological, and medical knowledge traditions survived, transformed, or were independently rediscovered across major civilizational transitions. It ma
INTERDOC_14 — Acoustic Engineering and Sacred Architecture: The 110 Hz Thread
[KEY FINDING] The Hal Saflieni Hypogeum in Malta (c. 3300–3000 BCE) — a subterranean temple carved from solid limestone — contains an "Oracle Chamber" that resonates powerfully at ~110 Hz when a male voice chants at the
ZB_1_13 — Sexual Selection and Mate Choice
Sexual selection — first articulated by Darwin (1871) in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex — is the evolutionary process by which traits that increase mating success are favored, even when they decreas
ZB_5_18 — Insect Decline Crisis
The global insect decline — sometimes called the "insect apocalypse" in popular media — refers to accumulating evidence that insect populations, biomass, and diversity are decreasing at alarming rates across many regions
ZB_4_04 — Flight Evolution
Powered flight has evolved independently at least four times in the history of life — in insects (~350 Ma), pterosaurs (~230 Ma), birds (~150 Ma), and bats (~55 Ma) — making it one of evolution's most spectacular converg
ZB_4_12 — Landscape Ecology: Patches, Corridors, and Mosaics
Landscape ecology studies how spatial patterns of ecosystems — the arrangement, size, shape, and connectivity of habitat patches within a heterogeneous landscape mosaic — influence ecological processes including species
ZB_3_06 — Fire Ecology
Fire ecology studies fire as a natural ecological process — a fundamental disturbance agent that shapes vegetation structure, species composition, nutrient cycling, and landscape patterns across much of Earth's terrestri
ZC_3_06 — Sociology of Law
Sociology of law examines law not as an autonomous system of rules but as a social institution — shaped by power, culture, and economic relations, and in turn shaping social life. Émile Durkheim (The Division of Labour i
ZC_5_06 — Environmental Sociology: Risk, Justice, and Ecological Modernization
Environmental sociology studies the reciprocal relationships between human societies and their natural environments — how social structures, economic systems, political institutions, cultural beliefs, and power relations
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