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.
323 results for "acoustic ecology" — page 6 of 17
G_4_06 — Sound Healing — Evidence, Pseudoscience, and Ancient Practice
Sound healing occupies a uniquely contested space where genuine medical science, ancient spiritual practice, and modern pseudoscience coexist and often blur together. On one end, music therapy is FDA-recognized for pain
G_3_07 — Cymatics — Visible Sound and the Physics of Vibration
Cymatics — from the Greek κῦμα (kyma, "wave") — is the study of visible sound patterns formed when a vibrating surface (plate, membrane, or fluid) organizes matter (sand, powder, liquid) into geometric configurations at
O_4_04 — Ringing Rocks, Musical Stones & Lithophones
Ringing rocks — stones that produce clear, bell-like tones when struck — have been documented at multiple locations worldwide, formed from rock types with specific mineralogical and structural properties that support mec
O_3_05 — Rivers as Arteries — Freshwater Systems and Sacred Hydrology
Rivers have served as the circulatory system of human civilization since the earliest settlements along the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, and Yellow River valleys. Across virtually every culture, rivers are not merely r
O_5_12 — Volcanic Islands: Surtsey, Hawaii, and Emergent Land
Volcanic islands — landmasses formed by submarine volcanic eruptions that build up from the ocean floor until they breach the sea surface — represent some of the most dynamic and scientifically informative geological fea
D_2_01 — Maltese Temple Builders and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum
The Maltese Temple Period (~3600–2500 BCE) produced the oldest free-standing structures on Earth — predating the Egyptian pyramids by ~1,000 years and Stonehenge by ~1,500 years. The tiny Maltese islands (316 km² total —
D_1_05 — Stonehenge and the British Megalithic Complex
Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, is Britain's most iconic prehistoric monument, constructed in multiple phases between approximately 3100 and 1500 BCE — a span of over 1,600 years. The site features massive sars
D_1_09 — Newgrange, Knowth, and Passage Tomb Astronomy
Newgrange, constructed around 3200 BCE in the Boyne Valley (Brú na Bóinne) of County Meath, Ireland, is one of the most remarkable Neolithic structures in the world — older than the Egyptian pyramids by approximately 700
D_5_04 — Pythagorean Harmony, Sacred Sound, and the Music of the Spheres
The Pythagorean discovery that musical harmony is governed by simple mathematical ratios (octave = 2:1, fifth = 3:2, fourth = 4:3) is one of the most consequential insights in intellectual history — the first demonstrati
H_3_07 — Suppression of Women's Knowledge and Healing Traditions
Across European and colonial history, women's roles as healers, herbalists, midwives, and knowledge transmitters were systematically marginalized through a combination of religious persecution, medical professionalizatio
R_4_05 — Seed Plants and Angiosperm Evolution
Angiosperms (flowering plants) are the most species-rich and ecologically dominant group of land plants, comprising roughly 300,000–400,000 species — over 90% of all living plant species. Their origin and rapid diversifi
R_4_08 — Echolocation and the Evolution of Sensory Systems
The evolution of sensory systems represents some of the most striking convergent solutions to ecological challenges across the animal kingdom. Echolocation — the ability to emit sound pulses and interpret returning echoe
R_5_14 — Thermoregulation: Endothermy, Ectothermy, and Metabolic Evolution
Thermoregulation — the ability to maintain body temperature within functional limits — is a fundamental challenge of animal life, and the strategies organisms employ span a continuum from pure ectothermy (relying on envi
ZA_1_16 — Sonoluminescence: Light from Sound and the Mystery of Collapsing Bubbles
Sonoluminescence is the emission of short bursts of light from gas bubbles in a liquid when excited by ultrasonic sound waves. First observed by H. Frenzel and H. Schultes at the University of Cologne in 1934 (multi-bubb
V_1_06 — Mathematics of Music: Harmonic Ratios & Tuning Systems
The relationship between mathematics and music is among the oldest in intellectual history. Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) is traditionally credited with discovering that consonant musical intervals correspond to simple num
U_1_18 — Electronic Music Synthesis and Sound Art
Electronic music — music produced or modified using electronic technology — evolved from experimental laboratory curiosities of the early 20th century into one of the dominant cultural forces of the modern era. [KEY FIND
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_29 — Epidemiology and Pandemics: Disease, Civilization, and the Biology of Outbreaks
Epidemiology — the study of disease distribution and determinants in populations — has fundamentally shaped human history, often more decisively than warfare or politics. The Antonine Plague (165–180 CE, likely smallpox)
X_3_03 — Epidemic and Pandemic History
Epidemics and pandemics — the outbreak and widespread transmission of infectious disease — have shaped human civilization as profoundly as wars, technologies, and ideas. Ancient: the Plague of Athens (430 BCE, described
INTERDOC_70 — Ancient Knowledge as Encoded Discovery of Biophysically Significant Parameters
The standard framing pits ancient wisdom against modern science, as if they are competing epistemologies. The evidence across ID1, ID2, and ID4 demolishes this framing by showing that the same biophysically significant p
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