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.
2,040 results for "Campaign to Stop Killer Robots" — page 44 of 102
ZF_3_05 — Ancient Maritime Navigation and Wayfinding
Long before the compass, sextant, or chronometer, ancient maritime cultures navigated thousands of miles of open ocean using sophisticated systems of environmental observation — star paths, ocean swell patterns, wind shi
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_5_18 — Wave & Tidal Energy
Wave and tidal energy — the extraction of electrical power from ocean surface waves and gravitational tidal flows — represent a vast but largely untapped renewable energy resource: the International Energy Agency (IEA) e
ZF_5_02 — Sonar and Acoustic Ocean Sensing: Technology and Discovery
Sonar (SOund NAvigation and Ranging) is the primary technology for sensing the underwater environment — an acoustic analog to radar that exploits the fact that sound travels efficiently through water while electromagneti
ZF_5_20 — Wallace Line: Biogeographic Boundary and Deep-Time Distribution Patterns
The Wallace Line is a biogeographic boundary running through the Malay Archipelago, separating the fauna of Asia (Sunda Shelf) from that of Australasia (Sahul Shelf). First identified by Alfred Russel Wallace during his
ZF_5_10 — Marine Biotechnology: Blue Pharmacy and Ocean Genetic Resources
The ocean harbors an estimated 2.2 million species (most undescribed) across environments spanning freezing polar waters to superheated hydrothermal vents, anoxic sediments to UV-drenched coral reefs — a staggering diver
ZF_5_21 — Invasive Species: Ecological Disruption, Biosecurity, and Marine Invasions
Invasive species — organisms introduced outside their native range that cause ecological, economic, or health damage — represent one of the top five drivers of global biodiversity loss, alongside habitat destruction, ove
ZF_5_09 — Whale Falls: Deep-Sea Decomposition and Chemosynthetic Ecosystems
Whale falls — the carcasses of large cetaceans that sink to the deep ocean floor — are among the most remarkable ecosystems in the sea, transforming the nutrient-poor desert of the abyssal plains into oases of biological
ZF_5_08 — Coastal Geomorphology: Erosion, Beaches, and Barrier Islands
Coastal geomorphology is the study of landforms at the interface of land and sea — a dynamic zone shaped by the constant interaction of waves, tides, currents, wind, rivers, geology, biology, and increasingly by human ac
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZF_5_06 — Ocean Energy: Tidal Power, Wave Energy, and OTEC
Ocean energy encompasses a family of renewable energy technologies that harvest the ocean's vast stores of kinetic, thermal, and chemical energy — including tidal power (predictable tidal flow and range), wave energy (wi
ZF_4_08 — Ocean Acidification Paleoclimate Record
Ocean acidification — the decrease in seawater pH caused by absorption of atmospheric CO₂ — is not only a modern phenomenon but has occurred repeatedly throughout Earth's history, leaving distinctive signals in the geolo
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_4_18 — Deep Ocean Microplastics
Deep ocean microplastics — synthetic polymer particles smaller than 5 mm that have infiltrated the deepest marine environments on Earth — represent one of the most alarming and poorly understood dimensions of global plas
ZF_4_15 — Ocean Sediments: Deep-Sea Cores, Proxy Records, and Paleoclimate
Ocean sediments are the Earth's most comprehensive climate archive — a continuous record of planetary conditions extending back over 200 million years, slowly accumulated grain by grain on the deep seafloor at rates of m
ZF_4_05 — Marine Pharmacology and Drug Discovery
Marine pharmacology explores the ocean's vast biodiversity as a source of bioactive compounds for drug development — a field that has yielded several approved drugs and thousands of promising leads since the pioneering w
ZF_4_04 — Ocean Acoustics and Sound Channels
Ocean acoustics — the study of sound propagation in the sea — is fundamental to marine science, military applications, and understanding marine life. Sound travels approximately 4.5× faster in seawater (~1,500 m/s) than
ZF_1_06 — Arctic and Antarctic Ocean Systems
The Arctic and Antarctic ocean systems — the planet's polar marine environments — play disproportionately critical roles in global ocean circulation, climate regulation, and marine biodiversity. The Arctic Ocean (~14.06
ZF_1_18 — Mesopelagic Zone Ecology
The mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 m depth) — the ocean's "twilight zone" — is emerging as one of the most ecologically and biogeochemically important yet poorly understood habitats on Earth. [KEY FINDING] Despite receiving
ZF_1_15 — Wave Physics: Wind Waves, Swell, and Coastal Dynamics
Ocean surface waves are the most visible expression of ocean-atmosphere energy transfer — created by wind blowing across the water surface, they travel across entire ocean basins and dissipate their energy on distant coa
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