RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

2,237 results for "El Niño" — page 79 of 112

ZD_4_01 Information & Computation

ZD_4_01 — Cryptography — From Caesar Cipher to Quantum Key Distribution

Cryptography — the science of secret communication — has evolved from ancient substitution ciphers to mathematically proven security systems that underpin the modern digital world. Julius Caesar shifted letters by three

cryptography Caesar cipher Enigma Turing public-key RSA
ZD_4_09 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_4_09 — Signal Processing and Fourier Analysis

Signal processing — the analysis, modification, and synthesis of signals (time-varying or spatially varying quantities) — is fundamental to telecommunications, audio engineering, image processing, radar, medical imaging,

signal processing Fourier transform FFT frequency domain spectral analysis digital signal processing
ZD_2_10 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_2_10 — Speech Recognition and Synthesis: From Acoustic Models to Neural Voice Generation

Speech recognition (Automatic Speech Recognition — ASR) and speech synthesis (Text-to-Speech — TTS) are complementary technologies that bridge human spoken language and machine processing. ASR converts spoken audio into

speech recognition ASR text-to-speech TTS voice assistant Whisper
L_1_01 Genetics & Origins

L_1_01 — Ancient DNA & Population Genetics

Modern paleogenomics has shown that human evolution was shaped by interbreeding, population structure, and repeated demographic turnover rather than a simple single-line progression. Ancient DNA revealed previously unkno

Denisovans Denisova Cave Svante Pääbo Nobel Prize ancient DNA aDNA
L_1_06 Genetics & Origins

L_1_06 — Human Migration Synthesis — DNA, Language, and Culture

The synthesis of genetic, linguistic, and archaeological evidence has transformed understanding of human migration over the past three decades.

out-of-Africa migration ancient DNA Austronesian expansion Bantu expansion Yamnaya
L_1_10 Genetics & Origins

L_1_10 — Neanderthal Genome and Legacy in Modern Humans

The sequencing of the Neanderthal genome ranks among the most significant achievements in modern biology. Beginning with the draft genome of Green et al. (2010) and refined by later high-coverage genomes from the Altai,

Neanderthal genome Neanderthal admixture archaic introgression Vindija Altai Neanderthal Homo neanderthalensis
L_1_05 Genetics & Origins

L_1_05 — Human Skin Color — Evolution, Latitude, and Cultural Significance

Human skin color is one of the most visible and most misunderstood traits in our species. The variation is primarily a product of natural selection balancing two competing needs: protection of folate (vitamin B9) from UV

skin pigmentation SLC24A5 MC1R vitamin D folate UV radiation
L_1_04 Genetics & Origins

L_1_04 — Archaic Human Species Synthesis

The human evolutionary tree is far more complex than the older linear model suggested. Fossils, ancient DNA, and proteomics now show that Homo sapiens overlapped with several other hominin lineages, including Neanderthal

archaic humans Neanderthal Denisovan Homo floresiensis hobbit Homo luzonensis
L_1_03 Genetics & Origins

L_1_03 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam & Population Origins

Mitochondrial Eve and Y-chromosomal Adam are the most recent common ancestors of all living humans along strictly maternal and strictly paternal lines. They were not the first woman and man, were not a couple, and do not

mitochondrial Eve Y-chromosomal Adam mtDNA haplogroup Out of Africa Jebel Irhoud
L_1_11 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages

Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe

convergent evolution parallel evolution molecular convergence homoplasy adaptation natural selection
L_1_07 Genetics & Origins

L_1_07 — Genetic Bottlenecks, Founder Effects, and Toba

Genetic bottlenecks — dramatic reductions in population size that slash genetic diversity — and founder effects — the reduced variation carried by small colonizing groups — have profoundly shaped the genomes of species f

genetic bottleneck founder effect Toba catastrophe supervolcano effective population size Ashkenazi founder
L_1_08 Genetics & Origins

L_1_08 — Denisovans — Archaic Hominin Deep Dive

Denisovans are an extinct group of archaic hominins identified primarily through ancient DNA analysis rather than traditional fossil morphology — making them history's first hominins to be discovered by genetics. In 2010

Denisovans Denisova Cave archaic hominin Homo denisova introgression admixture
L_1_16 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_1_16 — Denisovan Genetics and Legacy

The Denisovans — an extinct group of archaic humans first identified in 2010 from ancient DNA extracted from a finger bone fragment found in Denisova Cave, Altai Mountains, Siberia (~41,000 years old) — represent one of

denisovans denisova-cave ancient-dna introgression epas1 altitude-adaptation
L_4_07 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_4_07 — Twin Studies and Heritability

Twin studies represent one of the most powerful natural experiments in human genetics, exploiting the fact that monozygotic (MZ, "identical") twins share ~100% of their DNA while dizygotic (DZ, "fraternal") twins share ~

twin study monozygotic dizygotic heritability concordance ACE model
L_4_05 Genetics & Origins

L_4_05 — Paleogenomics Methods and Ancient DNA

Paleogenomics — the study of ancient genomes — has transformed archaeology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology over the past two decades, recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Svante

paleogenomics ancient DNA aDNA ancient DNA extraction petrous bone DNA degradation
L_4_04 Genetics & Origins

L_4_04 — Ancient Proteomics and Paleoproteomics

Paleoproteomics — the recovery and analysis of ancient proteins from archaeological and paleontological specimens — has emerged as a revolutionary complement to ancient DNA (aDNA), dramatically extending the temporal and

paleoproteomics ancient proteins collagen fingerprinting ZooMS mass spectrometry MALDI-TOF
L_4_03 Genetics & Origins

L_4_03 — Genetic Clocks and Molecular Dating

The molecular clock — the concept that DNA and protein sequences accumulate mutations at approximately regular rates over time — provides a powerful tool for dating evolutionary divergences independently of the fossil re

molecular clock mutation rate molecular dating divergence time substitution rate neutral theory
L_4_11 Speculative Genetics & Origins

L_4_11 — Genetic Engineering in Ancient Mythology — Directed Modification Claims

Across virtually every major mythological tradition, human creation is depicted as a deliberate act of divine engineering — gods fashioning humans from raw materials (clay, blood, corn, breath, bone) through intentional,

genetic engineering mythology Anunnaki Enki creation myth hybridization
L_4_12 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_4_12 — CRISPR Gene Drives and Population Genetics Ethics

CRISPR gene drives — genetic engineering systems that combine CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing with super-Mendelian inheritance to spread a modified gene through an entire wild population far faster than natural selection — repr

CRISPR Cas9 gene drive population genetics gene editing malaria
L_2_02 Genetics & Origins

L_2_02 — Population Genetics and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium

Population genetics — the mathematical study of allele frequency change in populations — provides the quantitative framework underlying evolutionary biology. The Hardy-Weinberg principle (1908), independently derived by

population genetics Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium allele frequency genetic drift natural selection migration