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.
2,379 results for "Ark of the Covenant" — page 54 of 119
I_2_13 — UK MOD Files: The British Approach
The United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MOD) maintained an official UAP investigation program for over five decades (1950-2009), making Britain one of the longest-running institutional UAP investigators in the Western wo
I_3_14 — The Tehran 1976 Incident: A Military Engagement Case
On September 19, 1976, Iranian Air Force F-4 Phantom II jets were scrambled from Shahrokhi Air Base (now Hamadan Air Base) to intercept a brilliant unidentified object reported over Tehran. The incident — documented in a
I_1_01 — The UAP Phenomenon: Overview and Historical Context
Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) — formerly "UFOs" — represent one of the most persistent and globally reported anomalous phenomena in modern history. Reports of unexplained aerial objects span from antiquity (Roman p
I_5_05 — Jacques Vallée's Control System Hypothesis and Passport to Magonia
Jacques Vallée — astrophysicist, computer scientist, and one of the most rigorous researchers in anomaly studies — proposes that the UFO/UAP phenomenon functions as a control system that influences human consciousness, c
I_4_16 — UAP Economic Implications of Disclosure
The potential economic implications of UAP disclosure — the scenario in which governments formally acknowledge the existence of advanced technologies of unknown or non-human origin and either release or fail to contain k
V_4_28 — Game Theory: Strategic Decision-Making and Evolutionary Dynamics
Game theory — the mathematical study of strategic interaction among rational agents — was formalized by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (1944) and transformed by John Nash'
V_4_24 — Chaos Theory: Nonlinear Dynamics, Strange Attractors, and the Butterfly Effect
Chaos theory — the study of deterministic systems exhibiting sensitive dependence on initial conditions — emerged in the 1960s–70s as a revolutionary insight: simple mathematical equations can produce behavior so complex
M_5_05 — Archaeological Hoaxes and Forgeries — A Cautionary Catalog
The history of archaeology is punctuated by famous frauds, hoaxes, and forgeries — intentional deceptions that have misled researchers, distorted public understanding, and, in some cases, caused decades of wasted scholar
M_5_18 — Mound Builders: Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian, and the Erasure of Indigenous Achievement
The "Mound Builders" refers to the diverse Indigenous North American cultures that constructed elaborate earthen mounds across eastern North America from approximately 3700 BCE (Watson Brake, Louisiana) through European
M_1_11 — Baigong Pipes: Natural Formation or Anomalous Technology?
The Baigong pipes (also called the "Baigong alien ruins") are a collection of pipe-like iron-rich structures found in and around three caves on Mount Baigong (also transliterated Bai Gong Shan), near Delingha in the remo
A_4_01 — The Mahabharata: India's Epic of Cosmic War
The Mahabharata is the longest epic poem ever composed — at ~100,000 verses (1.8 million words), it is roughly 10 times the combined length of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Attributed to the sage Vyasa ("the compiler"), it
A_4_27 — Korean Samguk Yusa: Myths, Miracles, and the Foundations of Korean Identity
The Samguk Yusa (삼국유사, "Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms") is a collection of legends, folktales, Buddhist miracle stories, and historical accounts relating to the Three Kingdoms of Korea (Goguryeo, Baekje, and Silla) a
A_3_11 — Homeric Hymns: Divine Preludes and the Gods of Olympus
The Homeric Hymns are a collection of 33 hexameter poems addressed to individual Greek deities, composed between approximately 750 and 500 BCE and attributed in antiquity to Homer — though they are the work of multiple a
U_1_17 — Electronic and Experimental Music: Technology, Avant-Garde, and Sonic Innovation
Electronic and experimental music — music that extends or breaks conventional assumptions about sound, composition, performance, and technology — represents one of the most radical artistic developments of the 20th and 2
U_1_26 — Solfeggio Frequencies
The "Solfeggio frequencies" are a set of specific musical tones — most commonly listed as 174, 285, 396, 417, 528, 639, 741, 852, and 963 Hz — claimed by proponents to possess extraordinary healing, spiritual, and transf
U_5_17 — Museum Decolonization: Repatriation, Representation, and the Politics of Display
Museum decolonization — the critical movement to address the colonial origins, structures, and power dynamics embedded in museum collections, exhibition practices, and institutional governance — has become one of the mos
U_2_21 — Abstract Art & Consciousness
Abstract art — visual art that does not attempt to represent external reality but instead explores relationships of form, color, line, and composition independently — emerged in the early 20th century in direct connectio
X_2_02 — Sound and Vibrational Medicine
Sound as a healing modality spans from well-validated clinical applications (neurologic music therapy for stroke rehabilitation, ultrasound for tissue healing, vibroacoustic therapy for pain) to cultural healing traditio
X_5_22 — Paracelsus & the Birth of Chemical Medicine
Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim (1493–1541), self-named Paracelsus, was a Swiss-German physician-alchemist who revolutionized European medicine by rejecting Galenic humoral theory and introducing
X_5_05 — Dermatology: The Science and Medicine of Skin
Dermatology is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis and management of diseases of the skin, hair, nails, and mucous membranes — the largest and most visible organ system. The skin serves as the body's primary b
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