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.
1,103 results for "AI hallucination" — page 49 of 56
F_2_12 — Saharan Trade Routes: Gold, Salt, and Knowledge Across the Desert
The trans-Saharan trade routes — a network of caravan trails crossing the world's largest hot desert (~9 million km²) between the Mediterranean coast and sub-Saharan West Africa — were among the most important long-dista
F_2_08 — Lapis Lazuli Trade Networks
Lapis lazuli — a deep-blue metamorphic rock composed primarily of lazurite — is one of the oldest traded luxury materials in human history, with its distribution across the ancient world providing direct evidence of long
F_2_13 — Copper Trade Networks: Great Lakes to Mediterranean
The Great Lakes copper deposits — particularly the vast deposits of native (naturally pure) copper on the Keweenaw Peninsula and Isle Royale of Michigan's Upper Peninsula — represent one of the world's most remarkable mi
F_4_22 — Ancient Road Systems: Persian Royal Road, Roman Via, Inca Qhapaq Ñan
The construction of engineered road systems represents one of the most transformative infrastructure achievements of ancient civilizations — and three empires produced road networks that, for their era, were unmatched in
F_4_19 — Denisovan Legacy in Island Southeast Asia and Melanesia
The Denisovans — an archaic hominin group identified in 2010 from ~41,000-year-old fossils found in Denisova Cave (Altai Mountains, Siberia) — left a striking and disproportionate genetic legacy in the populations of Isl
F_4_15 — Bell Beaker Phenomenon and European Transformation
The Bell Beaker phenomenon (c. 2750–1800 BCE) is one of the most geographically extensive and archaeologically debated cultural manifestations of European prehistory. Named after the distinctive bell-shaped drinking vess
F_4_05 — Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse
This document examines Sea Peoples and Bronze Age Collapse, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include The Interconnected World of ~1400–1200 BCE, The Amarna Letters — Evidence
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_25 — Doggerland: Europe's Submerged Landscape
Doggerland is the name given to the now-submerged landmass that once connected Britain to continental Europe across what is now the southern North Sea. During the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,500–19,000 years ago), when sea
F_4_10 — Roman Indian Ocean Trade and the Periplus
Rome's Indian Ocean trade network was one of the most extensive commercial systems of the ancient world, linking the Mediterranean to India, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia from the 1st century BCE through the 3rd century
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_29 — Columbian Exchange: Biological & Cultural Transformation
The Columbian Exchange — a term coined by historian Alfred W. Crosby in 1972 — describes the massive bidirectional transfer of plants, animals, diseases, technologies, and peoples between the Americas and the Old World f
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_03 — Domestication of the Horse and the Wheel: Technologies That Reshaped Civilization
The domestication of the horse and the invention of the wheel were among the most transformative technological developments in human history, fundamentally altering transportation, warfare, trade, and social organization
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_18 — Vavilov Centers: Origins of Cultivated Plants
The Vavilov centers of origin are the regions of the world where the greatest genetic diversity of cultivated plants and their wild relatives is found — identified by the Russian/Soviet botanist, geneticist, and plant ge
F_3_01 — The Agricultural Revolution
The Agricultural Revolution (~10,000 BCE) — the transition from hunting-gathering to farming — is arguably the most consequential event in human history. It enabled cities, writing, religion, states, armies, and eventual
F_3_07 — Independent Origins of Plant Domestication
Plant domestication — the process by which wild species are genetically and morphologically transformed through human selection into cultivable, human-dependent crops — arose independently in at least 7–11 geographically
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields