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.
1,606 results for "tit for tat" — page 63 of 81
F_1_01 — Trans-Oceanic Contact
Mainstream history asserts that the Americas were isolated from the Old World from ~11,000 BCE until Columbus (1492 CE), with the exception of brief Norse contact (~1000 CE). However, chemical evidence (cocaine and nicot
F_1_08 — Trans-Pacific Contact — Pre-Columbian Connections
The Pacific Ocean — covering over 165 million km² — was long assumed to be an impenetrable barrier to pre-Columbian cultural exchange between Asia/Oceania and the Americas. However, a growing body of botanical, genetic,
F_1_09 — Austronesian Expansion: The Greatest Maritime Migration
The Austronesian expansion is the most extensive pre-modern maritime migration in human history, covering over half the globe — from Taiwan to Madagascar, Easter Island, Hawaii, and New Zealand — over approximately 5,000
F_1_14 — Pre-Columbian Chicken Debate: Polynesian–South American Evidence
The pre-Columbian chicken debate centers on whether domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) — an Old World species originally domesticated in Southeast Asia — reached South America before European contact (1492+), v
F_2_07 — Salt Trade and Ancient Economies
Salt — sodium chloride (NaCl) — was arguably the most economically important commodity in the ancient and medieval world, rivaling gold and silver in its capacity to generate wealth, shape trade routes, and determine the
F_2_09 — Currency and Coinage Diffusion
The invention of standardized currency and coinage transformed human economic interaction and represents one of the great innovations in the history of exchange. Remarkably, coinage appears to have been independently inv
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_09 — The Green Sahara — When the Desert Was Eden
For most of the last several thousand years, the Sahara has been the world's largest hot desert — 9.2 million km² of arid wasteland. Yet between approximately 11,000 and 5,000 years ago, during the period known as the Af
F_4_31 — Lapita Culture: Origins of Pacific Colonization
The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1500–500 BCE) represents the archaeological signature of the first human colonization of Remote Oceania — the islands beyond the Solomon chain that had never been inhabited by any hominid.
F_4_18 — Roman Britain and Beyond: Provincial Connectivity
Roman Britain (43–410 CE) — the province of Britannia — represents one of the most thoroughly documented examples of how Rome's imperial system connected a peripheral, previously fragmented region to continent-wide econo
F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity
Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,
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_04 — Post-Catastrophe Knowledge Preservation
If advanced civilization existed before the Younger Dryas impact (~12,800 years ago), how could its knowledge survive total civilizational collapse? This is not an idle question — it is the central engineering problem of
F_4_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
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_30 — Salt: History, Preservation, and Global Trade Networks
Salt (sodium chloride) is arguably the most important mineral in human civilization — essential for life, critical for food preservation before refrigeration, and a driver of trade routes, taxation, and conflict across m
F_3_04 — Spread of Metallurgy: Copper, Bronze, Iron Across the Ancient World
Metallurgy developed independently in multiple regions, beginning with native copper use by ~9000 BCE and smelting by ~7000 BCE in Anatolia. The transition from copper to arsenical bronze and then tin bronze reshaped anc
F_3_12 — Ancient Quarantine and Disease Knowledge
Long before the development of germ theory (Pasteur and Koch, 1860s–1880s), ancient and medieval civilizations developed remarkably effective quarantine and disease containment practices based on empirical observation of
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
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