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.
1,033 results for "Clonycavan Man" — page 41 of 52
F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity
Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,
F_4_06 — Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe
This document examines Pre-Indo-European Substrate Cultures of Europe, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include Europe Before the Steppe Migrations, The Indo-European Expansio
F_4_03 — Ancient Maritime Technology and Naval Knowledge
The history of maritime technology reveals that ancient civilizations achieved levels of nautical engineering and navigational skill far exceeding common assumptions. Phoenician sailors may have circumnavigated Africa ~6
F_4_17 — Mediterranean–Indian Ocean Maritime Link in Antiquity
The maritime connection between the Mediterranean world and the Indian Ocean — linking Greco-Roman Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula, East Africa, and the Indian subcontinent — was one of antiquity's most consequential trade
F_4_13 — Glass Production: Origins, Trade, and Technology Transfer
Glass is one of the earliest synthetic materials, with origins tracing to faience (glazed quartz) production in Egypt and Mesopotamia by ~5000 BCE and true glass beads appearing by ~3500 BCE. For over two millennia, glas
F_4_16 — Lost Languages and Undeciphered Scripts
Dozens of ancient and medieval scripts remain partially or wholly undeciphered, representing lost linguistic traditions whose content may hold key information about ancient cultures, trade networks, religion, and technol
F_3_21 — Compass Navigation and Its Global Spread
The magnetic compass — one of China's "Four Great Inventions" — transformed navigation from a coastal, celestial, and dead-reckoning art into an all-weather, open-ocean capability. [KEY FINDING] The earliest confirmed re
F_3_05 — Writing System Origins and Independent Inventions
Writing was independently invented at least four times in human history: Sumerian cuneiform in Mesopotamia (~3400 BCE), Egyptian hieroglyphs (~3200 BCE), Chinese script (~1200 BCE with possible earlier precursors), and M
F_3_14 — Domestication: How Humans Reshaped Species and Themselves
Domestication — the multigenerational process by which humans selectively breed wild species, producing organisms that are genetically, morphologically, and behaviorally distinct from their wild ancestors and dependent o
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
F_3_06 — Shared Flood Myths and Cultural Diffusion
Flood myths — narratives of a catastrophic deluge that destroys most of humanity, typically with a chosen survivor who preserves life — appear across cultures worldwide, from the Epic of Gilgamesh (Tablet XI, Utnapishtim
F_3_08 — Ancient Communication and Postal Systems
Long before electronic communication, ancient civilizations developed sophisticated communication and postal systems that enabled information to travel across vast empires at speeds that would not be surpassed until the
ZA_2_10 — Tachyons and Superluminal Physics
Tachyons — hypothetical particles that always travel faster than light — have fascinated physicists since Gerald Feinberg's 1967 formalization, yet no tachyon has ever been observed. In special relativity, a massive part
ZA_2_01 — Time: Physics and Philosophy
Time is arguably the deepest unsolved problem in physics and philosophy. Physics reveals: (1) time is relative, not absolute — Einstein showed it flows at different rates depending on velocity and gravity; (2) the fundam
ZA_2_12 — The Black Hole Information Paradox
The black hole information paradox — first articulated by Stephen Hawking in 1976 — is arguably the most profound puzzle connecting quantum mechanics, general relativity, and information theory. When a black hole forms a
ZA_1_12 — Quantum Optics: Light at the Photon Level
Quantum optics — the study of light and its interaction with matter at the level of individual photons — explores phenomena that cannot be explained by classical electromagnetic theory and lies at the heart of quantum in
ZA_1_16 — Sonoluminescence: Light from Sound and the Mystery of Collapsing Bubbles
Sonoluminescence is the emission of short bursts of light from gas bubbles in a liquid when excited by ultrasonic sound waves. First observed by H. Frenzel and H. Schultes at the University of Cologne in 1934 (multi-bubb
ZA_1_14 — The Measurement Problem: Quantum Mechanics' Deepest Puzzle
The measurement problem — arguably the deepest conceptual issue in all of physics — arises from a fundamental tension within quantum mechanics between two processes: (1) unitary evolution — the deterministic, continuous,
ZA_1_05 — Quantum Decoherence and the Measurement Problem
Quantum decoherence explains how the strange superposition behavior of quantum mechanics transitions into the definite, classical-looking world we observe — without requiring a mysterious "collapse" postulate. When a qua
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
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