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 4 of 11
ZH_5_01 — Medieval European Astronomy: Monasteries to Universities
Medieval European astronomy (roughly 500–1500 CE) is often dismissed as a "dark age" of astronomical ignorance — sandwiched between Greek–Roman achievement and the Copernican revolution. This view is profoundly misleadin
ZH_2_02 — Indian Astronomical Traditions: Aryabhata to Jantar Mantar
Indian astronomy (Jyotish Shastra) constitutes one of the most mathematically sophisticated astronomical traditions of the pre-modern world, spanning from the Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE) through the classical siddhānt
C_1_12 — Fire Symbolism, Sacred Flame, and the Theft of Fire
Fire is arguably the most transformative technology in human history — and the most universally sacralized natural phenomenon. The control of fire (~1.5 million years ago, Homo erectus) enabled cooking (which transformed
C_1_13 — Sacred Mountains and the Cosmic Mountain
The sacred mountain is one of humanity's most enduring religious symbols — a vertical axis connecting earth and heaven that appears in virtually every major civilization. From Mount Meru at the center of Hindu-Buddhist-J
C_4_06 — Māori Mythology and Whakapapa
Māori mythology — the cosmological tradition of the Polynesian people of Aotearoa (New Zealand) — contains one of the world's most philosophically sophisticated creation narratives, moving from Te Kore (the Void/Potentia
C_5_39 — Feng Shui: Chinese Geomancy, Spatial Harmony, and the Built Environment
Feng shui (風水, literally "wind-water") is a Chinese system of spatial analysis and environmental design with roots extending back at least 3,500 years, aimed at harmonizing human structures and activities with the natura
C_3_05 — Aztec Cosmology and the Five Suns
Aztec (Mexica) cosmology describes the universe as having passed through four previous ages (Suns), each created and destroyed by different gods through catastrophic events — jaguars, wind, fire-rain, and flood. We live
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_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_1_02 — Tidal Science: Lunar Cycles, Tidal Locking, and Tidal Energy
Tides — the rhythmic rise and fall of ocean surfaces — are among the most predictable natural phenomena on Earth, driven primarily by the gravitational attraction of the Moon (accounting for ~68% of tidal forcing) and th
ZF_1_05 — Tsunami Science and Warning Systems
Tsunamis — long-wavelength ocean waves generated by sudden displacement of the water column — are among the most destructive natural hazards, capable of crossing entire ocean basins and devastating coastlines thousands o
E_3_07 — Late Bronze Age Collapse
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) was one of the most dramatic civilizational catastrophes in human history — a cascade of destructions, abandonments, and systemic failures that ended the interconnected pal
E_1_11 — Comet Encke and the Taurid Complex: Recurring Cosmic Threat
Comet 2P/Encke — a short-period comet with the shortest known orbital period of any bright comet (3.3 years) — is the most prominent surviving fragment of a much larger cometary body whose progressive disintegration over
E_1_07 — Tunguska Event and Modern Impact Evidence
On June 30, 1908, an atmospheric explosion over the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in central Siberia released energy equivalent to approximately 12 megatons of TNT (roughly 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb), flattening 2,150
J_2_12 — Ancient Terracotta Technology: Ceramics, Bricks, and Firing
Terracotta (from Italian terra cotta, "baked earth") — the technology of shaping and firing clay into durable forms — is among the oldest and most universally important technologies in human history. The earliest known f
Q_4_15 — Magnetism: From Lodestones to MRI, Domains to Spin
Magnetism — the force exerted by magnets and electric currents, and the response of materials to magnetic fields — has been known since antiquity (the lodestone, a naturally magnetized iron ore, was used in Chinese compa
Q_2_17 — Fermi Paradox Solutions Comprehensive
The Fermi Paradox — named after physicist Enrico Fermi's 1950 lunchtime remark "Where is everybody?" — captures the apparent contradiction between the high probability of extraterrestrial civilizations (given the ~200–40
Q_3_20 — Exoplanet Atmospheres: Spectroscopy, Biosignatures & Habitability
The characterization of exoplanet atmospheres represents one of the most rapidly advancing frontiers in astrophysics, driven by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST, launched December 25, 2021) and ground-based high-reso
Q_3_19 — The Fermi Paradox: A Catalog of Proposed Solutions
The Fermi Paradox — the apparent contradiction between the high probability of extraterrestrial civilizations (given ~200–400 billion stars in the Milky Way, with ~20% harboring Earth-like planets in habitable zones) and
Q_3_03 — Exoplanets, Habitable Zones, and the Search for Life
The discovery of exoplanets — worlds orbiting stars other than the Sun — has transformed astronomy from a field where planets were known only in our solar system to one cataloging over 5,700 confirmed exoplanets as of 20
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