RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

1,314 results for "Eye of Africa" — page 47 of 66

I_4_05 Credible UAP Disclosure

I_4_05 — UAP Photography, Video Evidence, and Analysis

Visual evidence — photographs and videos — has been central to UAP discourse since the mid-20th century, yet remains among the most contentious categories of evidence due to challenges of provenance, chain of custody, ca

UAP video UAP photograph FLIR GIMBAL GOFAST infrared
I_4_04 UAP Disclosure

I_4_04 — UAP Propulsion Theories and Metamaterials

The observed performance characteristics attributed to UAP — instantaneous acceleration, hypersonic speed without sonic booms, apparent anti-gravity hover, and trans-medium travel — would require propulsion physics far b

UAP propulsion Alcubierre drive warp drive metamaterials TTSA Art's Parts
V_1_08 Mathematics & Information

V_1_08 — Mathematical Puzzles & Recreational Mathematics

Mathematical puzzles — problems posed for amusement, education, or intellectual challenge — have served as engines of mathematical discovery for over 4,000 years. The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus (c. 1650 BCE, Egypt) conta

mathematical puzzles recreational mathematics Rhind Papyrus Archimedes cattle problem Fibonacci rabbits Tower of Hanoi
V_1_02 Mathematics & Information

V_1_02 — Infinity, Paradoxes, and Mathematical Philosophy

Infinity has been a source of wonder, terror, and paradox since the ancient Greeks first grappled with Zeno's paradoxes of motion. Georg Cantor's revolutionary set theory (1870s-1890s) proved that infinities come in diff

infinity Cantor set theory Zeno paradoxes Russell paradox continuum hypothesis
V_1_04 Mathematics & Information

V_1_04 — Sacred Geometry — Mathematical Patterns in Ancient Design

Sacred geometry refers to the attribution of symbolic, cosmological, or divine meaning to geometric forms and mathematical ratios — a practice documented in ancient Egyptian, Greek, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, and medieval

sacred geometry golden ratio phi Fibonacci Flower of Life Metatron's cube
V_1_10 Mathematics & Information

V_1_10 — Ancient Greek Mathematics

Ancient Greek mathematics (c. 600 BCE – 500 CE) transformed mathematics from a collection of empirical recipes into a deductive science built on axioms, definitions, and rigorous proof. Thales of Miletus (c. 624–546 BCE)

Greek mathematics Euclid Elements Pythagoras Archimedes Thales
V_1_13 Mathematics & Information

V_1_13 — Women in Mathematics History

Women have made profound contributions to mathematics throughout history despite systematic exclusion from universities, academies, and professional recognition. Hypatia of Alexandria (c. 350–415 CE), the first well-docu

women mathematics Hypatia Emmy Noether Sophie Germain Ada Lovelace Sofia Kovalevskaya
V_1_11 Mathematics & Information

V_1_11 — Islamic Golden Age Mathematics

Islamic Golden Age mathematics (c. 750–1500 CE) preserved, synthesized, and dramatically extended the mathematical traditions of Greece, India, Persia, and Mesopotamia, creating entirely new fields and transmitting the r

Islamic mathematics al-Khwarizmi algebra algorithm Omar Khayyam cubic equations
V_4_03 Mathematics & Information

V_4_03 — Geometric Probability and Buffon's Needle

Geometric probability assigns probabilities to random geometric events — needle drops, random points in regions, random lines intersecting figures — formalizing questions that blend chance with spatial structure. Buffon'

geometric probability Buffon needle Bertrand paradox integral geometry stochastic geometry random convex sets
V_4_04 Mathematics & Information

V_4_04 — Unsolved Problems in Mathematics

Mathematics has always been driven by problems that resist solution — conjectures so deep that their resolution reshapes entire fields. The Clay Mathematics Institute's seven Millennium Prize Problems ($1 million each, a

unsolved problems Millennium Prize Riemann hypothesis P vs NP Navier-Stokes Hodge conjecture
V_4_21 Verified Mathematics & Information

V_4_21 — Cryptography & Mathematical Foundations

Cryptography — the science of secure communication — rests on some of the deepest results in number theory, algebra, and computational complexity. Modern public-key cryptography was born in 1976 when Whitfield Diffie and

cryptography RSA elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman public key symmetric encryption
V_4_01 Mathematics & Information

V_4_01 — Discrete Mathematics and Logic

Discrete mathematics — the study of mathematical structures that are countable, separated, or distinct (as opposed to continuous) — provides the theoretical bedrock for computer science, digital communication, and rigoro

discrete mathematics mathematical logic propositional logic predicate logic set theory Gödel incompleteness
V_3_06 Mathematics & Information

V_3_06 — Differential Equations: Modeling Change and Dynamics

Differential equations describe how quantities change and are the primary mathematical language of physics, engineering, biology, and economics. From Newton's second law (F = ma, a second-order ODE) to Einstein's field e

differential equations ordinary differential equations partial differential equations ODE PDE dynamical systems
V_2_06 Mathematics & Information

V_2_06 — Set Theory & Foundations Crisis: Cantor, Russell, Gödel

The foundations crisis (c. 1895–1936) was the most profound intellectual upheaval in the history of mathematics — revealing that the discipline's logical underpinnings were far more fragile than anyone had imagined.

set theory foundations Cantor Russell paradox Gödel incompleteness
V_2_04 Mathematics & Information

V_2_04 — Geometry: Euclid to Non-Euclidean Revolution

Euclid's Elements* (c. 300 BCE, Alexandria) is the most influential textbook in human history — the second most printed book after the Bible — establishing the axiomatic method** (definitions, postulates, common notions

geometry Euclid Elements axiom parallel postulate Lobachevsky
V_2_13 Mathematics & Information

V_2_13 — Measure Theory and Integration

Measure theory provides the rigorous mathematical foundation for the concepts of length, area, volume, and probability — and the integration theory built upon them. Developed primarily by Henri Lebesgue (1902), it resolv

measure theory Lebesgue measure sigma algebra Borel set measurable function Lebesgue integral
V_2_15 Mathematics & Information

V_2_15 — Galois Theory and Field Extensions

Galois theory, developed by Évariste Galois (1811-1832) in the last years of his tragically short life, is one of the great triumphs of abstract algebra — a theory connecting field extensions to group theory that definit

Galois theory field extension polynomial roots solvability by radicals quintic equation group theory
V_2_14 Mathematics & Information

V_2_14 — Differential Topology and Manifolds

Differential topology studies smooth manifolds — spaces that locally resemble Euclidean $\mathbb{R}^n$ with smooth (infinitely differentiable) transition maps — and the smooth maps between them, classified up to diffeomo

differential topology manifold smooth manifold diffeomorphism tangent bundle vector field
M_5_26 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_26 — Levantine Archaeology: Crossroads of Ancient Civilizations

The Levant — the eastern Mediterranean corridor encompassing modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and southeastern Turkey — is arguably the most archaeologically consequential region on Earth. It witnessed t

levant fertile crescent natufian jericho neolithic ancient near east
M_5_01 Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_01 — Vitrified Forts of Scotland and Beyond

Over 60 hillforts across Scotland — and dozens more across France, Sweden, Germany, and beyond — exhibit walls whose stones have been fused together by extreme heat, reaching temperatures of 1,000–1,200°C.

vitrified fort vitrification Scotland hillfort Tap o' Noth Craig Phadrig