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.
2,480 results for "Brú na Bóinne" — page 77 of 124
INTERDOC_62 — Chemical Language Systems: Information Encoding from Microbes to Consciousness
Bacterial quorum sensing molecules encode population-density commands with combinatorial logic-gate precision (Bassler and Losick, 2006); microbial short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) direct host immune programming, epigenet
INTERDOC_55 — Barrier Permeability as Consciousness Gate
The mammalian nervous system is biochemically isolated from the rest of the body and the external environment by a layered system of barriers — the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the intestinal epithelial barrier, the blood-
InterDoc: Productive Fictions — Real Effects from Nonexistent Referents
INTERDOC_46 — Christian Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline from the Church Fathers to the Modern Era
Christian institutional suppression operated through six interconnected mechanisms across 19 centuries: (1) Canon formation and text destruction — defining which texts were "scripture" and systematically destroying all o
INTERDOC_18 — Volcanic Winter, the Bronze Age Collapse, and Civilizational Fragility
The Thera eruption (Santorini, ~1628 BCE or ~1530 BCE — dating remains contested) ejected an estimated 60 km³ of material — four times the volume of Krakatoa (1883). Ice core evidence from Greenland (GISP2) and tree-ring
INTERDOC_54 — Vibration as Universal Information Substrate
Across physics, biology, and humanity's most enduring sacred and therapeutic traditions, vibration recurs as a fundamental information-bearing modality. The evidence: every biological tissue is mechanotransductive at som
ZB_2_12 — Biological Scaling and Allometry
Allometry — the study of how biological characteristics scale with body size — reveals some of the most universal quantitative laws in biology. From bacteria to blue whales, spanning 21 orders of magnitude in body mass,
ZB_2_03 — Biomineralization and Biological Engineering
Biomineralization — the process by which living organisms produce minerals — represents one of the most sophisticated feats of biological engineering on Earth. From nacre (mother of pearl), whose alternating layers of ar
ZB_2_16 — Tardigrades: Biology of Indestructibility
Tardigrades (phylum Tardigrada, ~1,400 described species) — commonly called "water bears" or "moss piglets" — are microscopic invertebrates (0.1–1.5 mm) renowned for their extraordinary tolerance to environmental extreme
ZB_2_20 — Human Microbiome & Dysbiosis
The human microbiome — the collective genome of the ~38 trillion microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) inhabiting the human body — represents a second genome interacting with host physiology in ways that are
ZB_2_23 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Distributed Cognition
Cephalopods — octopuses, cuttlefish, squid, and nautiluses — represent one of evolution's most extraordinary experiments in intelligence, having diverged from the vertebrate lineage approximately 530 million years ago ye
ZB_2_11 — Biological Electricity and Bioelectricity
Electricity is fundamental to life — every living cell maintains a transmembrane potential (Vmem, typically −40 to −90 mV in animal cells) created by ion channels and pumps that selectively move Na⁺, K⁺, Ca²⁺, and Cl⁻ ac
ZB_2_05 — Aging, Longevity, and the Biology of Death
Why do organisms age and die? This question — one of the oldest in human inquiry — has yielded remarkable molecular answers in recent decades. Leonard Hayflick's 1961 discovery that human cells have a finite replicative
ZB_2_08 — Metamorphosis: Insect and Amphibian Transformation
Metamorphosis — a dramatic post-embryonic transformation in body form — is one of nature's most remarkable phenomena. Over 80% of insect species undergo complete metamorphosis (holometaboly), dissolving their larval tiss
ZB_2_19 — Epigenetics & Chromatin Modification
Epigenetics — literally "above genetics" — encompasses heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alterations to the DNA sequence itself. The term was coined by Conrad Hal Waddington in 1942 to describe how
ZB_2_22 — Bioelectricity, Morphogenesis, and Regeneration
Bioelectricity — the endogenous electrical signaling produced by all living cells through ion channels, pumps, and gap junctions — has emerged as a fundamental layer of biological information processing that operates alo
ZB_2_09 — Biological Regeneration: Limb Regrowth and Tissue Repair
The ability to regenerate lost body parts varies enormously across the animal kingdom. Planarian flatworms can rebuild an entire organism from a fragment 1/279th of the original. Salamanders regenerate complete limbs, ja
ZB_2_15 — Carnivorous Plants: Evolution, Mechanisms, and Ecology
Carnivorous plants — approximately 800 species across at least 12 independently evolved lineages — have evolved the capacity to attract, capture, and digest animal prey (primarily arthropods) to supplement nutrient acqui
ZB_1_02 — Social Insects — Superorganisms and Collective Intelligence
Social insects — ants, bees, wasps, and termites — represent one of evolution's most spectacular innovations: the subordination of individual reproduction to colony-level organization, producing "superorganisms" capable
ZB_1_17 — Cognitive Ecology and Animal Decision-Making
Cognitive ecology — the study of how animals' cognitive abilities (perception, learning, memory, decision-making) have been shaped by the ecological challenges they face — bridges behavioral ecology, comparative psycholo
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