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.
2,501 results for "La Niña" — page 71 of 126
E_4_14 — Stratigraphic Methods and Geological Timekeeping
Stratigraphy — the study of rock layers (strata) and their sequential relationships — is the foundational framework for understanding geological time and establishing the chronology of Earth's 4.54-billion-year history.
E_1_11 — Comet Encke and the Taurid Complex: Recurring Cosmic Threat
Comet 2P/Encke — a short-period comet with the shortest known orbital period of any bright comet (3.3 years) — is the most prominent surviving fragment of a much larger cometary body whose progressive disintegration over
E_1_01 — The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH)
This document examines The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH), a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Notable findings include: Greenland ice-core data confirm rapid cooling at onset and abrupt w
E_1_08 — Ancient Supernovae and Their Cultural Impact
Supernovae — the explosive deaths of massive stars — are among the most energetic events in the universe, capable of briefly outshining entire galaxies. When they occur within our galaxy at distances of a few thousand li
E_1_05 — The Hollow Moon: Evidence, Anomalies & Theories
This document examines The Hollow Moon: Evidence, Anomalies & Theories, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include Apollo Seismic "Ringing Like a Bell", Anomalous Densi
E_1_07 — Tunguska Event and Modern Impact Evidence
On June 30, 1908, an atmospheric explosion over the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in central Siberia released energy equivalent to approximately 12 megatons of TNT (roughly 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb), flattening 2,150
E_1_16 — Thera/Santorini Eruption: Detailed Analysis of the Minoan Catastrophe
The eruption of Thera (modern Santorini, Greece) was one of the largest volcanic events in the Holocene — estimated at VEI 6–7 (Volcanic Explosivity Index), ejecting approximately 30–80 km³ of magma (dense rock equivalen
E_1_17 — Toba Supereruption: Genetic Bottleneck and Climate Catastrophe
The Toba supereruption — occurring approximately 74,000 years ago (74 ka) on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia — was the largest volcanic eruption of the last 2 million years and one of the most catastrophic events in hum
E_5_03 — The End-Triassic Mass Extinction
The End-Triassic mass extinction (c. 201.564 ± 0.015 million years ago) was one of the "Big Five" mass extinctions in Earth's history, eliminating approximately 76% of all species and ~50% of genera, clearing the ecologi
E_5_07 — Post-Extinction Recovery Patterns: Adaptive Radiation After Mass Dying
Mass extinctions are not merely episodes of destruction — they fundamentally reshape the trajectory of life through the recovery dynamics that follow. Post-extinction recovery is typically slow (5–10 million years for fu
ZG_2_18 — Pragmatics & Speech Act Theory: Language in Context, Meaning Beyond Words
Pragmatics — the branch of linguistics concerned with how context, speaker intention, shared knowledge, and social relationships contribute to meaning beyond the literal semantic content of words — addresses a fundamenta
ZG_2_13 — Dialectology: Regional Variation, Dialect Continua, and Isoglosses
Dialectology — the systematic study of regional linguistic variation — investigates how languages differ from place to place, mapping the geographical distribution of pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, and usage pattern
ZG_2_08 — Etymology and Historical Word Origins
Etymology is the study of the origin, history, and changing meanings of words — tracing the life of a word from its earliest attested form (or its reconstructed proto-form) through the centuries of sound change, semantic
ZG_2_00 — Language Families History: Subfolder Summary
ZG_5_02 — Narrative Structure: Story Grammar and Discourse Analysis
Narrative structure — the recurring patterns by which humans organize events into stories — is one of the most fundamental and universal features of human cognition and communication. From Aristotle's observation (c. 335
ZG_5_22 — Chemical Grammar: Information and Communication in Microbial Systems
Bacterial populations communicate. They sense their own density via secreted small-molecule autoinducers, distinguish self from non-self via species-specific signals, exchange information across kingdoms via universal AI
ZG_5_12 — Conversation Analysis: Turn-Taking, Repair, and Sequential Organization
Conversation Analysis (CA) is a rigorous empirical approach to studying the organization of naturally occurring talk-in-interaction, founded by the sociologist Harvey Sacks in collaboration with Emanuel Schegloff and Gai
ZG_5_01 — Computational Linguistics and NLP
Computational linguistics (CL) and natural language processing (NLP) are the interdisciplinary fields concerned with enabling computers to process, analyze, understand, and generate human language. CL originated in the 1
ZG_5_20 — Oracle Bones: Shang Dynasty Divination, Pyromancy, and the Origins of Chinese Writing
Oracle bones (jiǎgǔ 甲骨) are pieces of ox scapula and turtle plastron used for pyromantic divination during the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE), primarily at the royal capital Yinxu (殷墟) near modern Anyang, Henan Provinc
ZG_5_23 — Undeciphered Scripts: The World's Unsolved Writing Systems
Despite the successful decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs (Champollion, 1822), Mesopotamian cuneiform (Rawlinson et al., 1850s), Linear B (Ventris, 1952), and Maya glyphs (Knorozov et al., 1952–1980s), dozens of ancien
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