RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

107 results for "living material" — page 5 of 6

J_2_07 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_07 — Ancient Leather, Parchment, and Hide Technology

Leather and parchment — materials produced by the chemical and physical transformation of animal hides and skins — are among humanity's oldest and most versatile manufactured materials, with evidence of hide processing (

leather tanning hide parchment vellum rawhide
J_2_18 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_18 — Ancient Textile Technology: Fibers, Looms, and Dyes

Textile production — spinning fiber into thread and weaving thread into cloth — is among the oldest and most consequential human technologies, predating pottery and metallurgy. [KEY FINDING] The oldest known textile frag

ancient-textiles loom-technology weaving natural-dyes flax-linen cotton
J_2_17 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_17 — Sub-Saharan African Iron Smelting

Sub-Saharan Africa has one of the longest and most complex traditions of iron smelting in the world, with evidence dating to at least 2500–2000 BCE in parts of Central and West Africa — potentially predating iron use in

iron-smelting sub-saharan-africa metallurgy bloomery carbon-steel nok-culture
J_2_16 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_16 — Ancient Adhesives: Glues, Resins, and Bonding Chemistry

Adhesives — substances that bond surfaces together — are among the oldest chemical technologies in human history, predating agriculture, metallurgy, and ceramics. The earliest known deliberately produced adhesive is birc

adhesive glue resin bitumen pitch tar
J_2_04 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_04 — Ancient Ceramics and Pottery Technology

Ceramics represent humanity's oldest synthetic material, with the earliest known fired-clay vessels — Jōmon pottery from Japan — dated to c. 16,500 BP (Odai Yamamoto site; Kuzmin, 2006), predating agriculture by thousand

ceramics pottery kiln technology terra sigillata porcelain faience
J_5_17 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_17 — Piezoelectric and Crystalline Technologies in Ancient and Modern Contexts

Piezoelectricity — the generation of electric charge from mechanical stress in certain crystalline materials, and conversely, the mechanical deformation of such materials under applied voltage — is one of the most import

piezoelectricity piezoelectric effect quartz crystal technology Jacques Curie Pierre Curie
J_5_11 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_11 — Chinese Ancient Inventions: The Technological Cornucopia

Ancient and medieval China produced an extraordinary range of technological innovations — many predating their European counterparts by centuries to millennia. The classic formulation identifies the "Four Great Invention

China invention gunpowder compass paper printing
J_4_14 Verified Ancient Technology

J_4_14 — Ancient Beekeeping & Apiculture Technology

Beekeeping (apiculture) ranks among humanity's oldest managed food-production technologies, with evidence of human-bee relationships extending back at least 9,000 years. Rock art in the Cueva de la Araña (Spider Cave) ne

apiculture beekeeping honey beeswax Apis mellifera ancient Egypt
J_4_07 Verified Ancient Technology

J_4_07 — Ancient Chemical Technology and Preservation

Ancient civilizations developed a wide range of chemical technologies — processes that transform the composition of materials through heating, dissolution, fermentation, precipitation, and other reactions — millennia bef

alchemy chemical technology embalming mummification natron tanning
J_4_15 Credible Ancient Technology

J_4_15 — Inuit Engineering & Arctic Technology

Inuit engineering represents one of humanity's most remarkable technological adaptations to extreme environmental conditions — Arctic and Subarctic peoples (including Inuit, Yupik, and Iñupiat groups across northern Cana

Inuit technology igloo qamutiik qajaq kayak umiak
J_4_16 Verified Ancient Technology

J_4_16 — Ancient Glass Technology: Production, Trade, and Innovation

Ancient glass technology represents one of humanity's most sophisticated materials-science achievements, spanning from earliest faience production (~4500 BCE, predynastic Egypt and Mesopotamia) through the revolutionary

ancient glass faience glassblowing Roman glass Lycurgus Cup natron
Q_4_19 Verified Cosmology & Physics

Q_4_19 — Electrochemistry: Galvanic Cells, Electrolysis, and Energy Storage

Electrochemistry — the study of chemical reactions that produce or are driven by electrical energy — is foundational to energy storage, corrosion science, industrial manufacturing, and biological processes. Alessandro Vo

electrochemistry galvanic cell electrolysis Faraday Nernst equation battery
Q_4_22 Verified Cosmology & Physics

Q_4_22 — Tribology: Friction, Wear, and Lubrication

Tribology — the science of interacting surfaces in relative motion, encompassing friction, wear, and lubrication — was named by H. Peter Jost in a 1966 UK Department of Education and Science report estimating that improv

tribology friction wear lubrication Coulomb friction Amontons laws
Q_4_20 Verified Cosmology & Physics

Q_4_20 — Catalysis: From Haber-Bosch to Asymmetric Synthesis

Catalysis — the acceleration of a chemical reaction by a substance (the catalyst) that is not consumed in the process — accounts for over 90% of all industrial chemical processes and has earned more Nobel Prizes than any

catalysis catalyst Haber-Bosch Ziegler-Natta asymmetric catalysis enzyme
Q_4_17 Verified Cosmology & Physics

Q_4_17 — Crystallography: Structure Determination and Symmetry

Crystallography — the science of determining the arrangement of atoms within crystalline solids — has been one of the most productive scientific disciplines in history, contributing to 29 Nobel Prizes across physics, che

crystallography X-ray diffraction Bragg's law crystal structure unit cell space group
Credible

INTERDOC_16 — Metallurgy, Alchemy, and the Chemistry Thread

The transformation of raw ore into metal was among humanity's most consequential discoveries. Copper smelting appeared by ~5500 BCE at sites like Belovode (Serbia) and Çatalhöyük (Anatolia). Bronze (copper-tin alloy) eme

metallurgy alchemy transmutation smelting bronze iron
D_5_13 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_5_13 — Obsidian: Volcanic Glass in Technology, Trade, and Ritual

Obsidian — a naturally occurring volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly with insufficient crystal growth — is one of the most important materials in human technological and cultural history. Prized for its

obsidian volcanic glass lithic technology obsidian hydration dating Çatalhöyük Mesoamerican obsidian
S_4_10 Credible Future Technology

S_4_10 — Space Elevators and Advanced Launch Technology

Space access remains the fundamental bottleneck for space development — current chemical rockets achieve orbit at $1,500–$5,000/kg to low Earth orbit (SpaceX Falcon 9, ~$2,700/kg; Starship aims for <$100/kg but is unprov

space elevator launch technology mass driver electromagnetic launch tether Skyhook
S_5_00 Future Technology

S_5_00 — Society Infrastructure: Subfolder Summary

F_2_16 Verified Lost Connections

F_2_16 — Numismatic Evidence for Ancient Trade: Coins as Contact Proof

Coins — small, durable, precisely dated, and geographically attributable objects — are among the most powerful archaeological evidence for long-distance trade, cultural contact, and economic integration in the ancient wo

coin numismatics trade proof hoard dirham