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.
2,237 results for "El Niño" — page 80 of 112
L_2_17 — Pacific Islander Genetics: Austronesian Ancestry, Denisovan Introgression, and Oceanian Genomics
Pacific Islander populations — spanning Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia — harbor some of the most genetically complex and scientifically informative genomes in human biology. Their genetic history records multiple d
L_2_16 — Genetic Diversity and Inbreeding: Population Health Across History
Genetic diversity — the total amount of genetic variation within a population — is a fundamental determinant of population health, adaptive potential, and long-term survival. The loss of diversity through inbreeding (mat
L_2_07 — European Genetics and Three Ancestral Populations
The genetic history of Europe has been revolutionized by ancient DNA, revealing that most present-day Europeans can be modeled at a broad level as mixtures of three major ancestral components assembled over the past ~10,
L_2_01 — Domestication Genetics — How Humans Reshaped Life
Domestication — the genetic transformation of wild species into human-dependent organisms — ranks among the most consequential biological processes in Earth's history.
L_2_10 — Human–Dog Co-Evolution: 40,000 Years Together
The domestication of the dog (Canis lupus familiaris) from gray wolves (Canis lupus) represents the oldest known domestication event and one of the most consequential interspecies relationships in human history — predati
L_2_05 — Americas Peopling Genetics
The peopling of the Americas is one of the clearest cases where ancient DNA and archaeology have converged to overturn an older narrative. The core model now favored by genetics is that the main ancestry of Indigenous Am
L_2_04 — Oceanian Genetics and Pacific Migration
The human settlement of Oceania represents the last major expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe, and the most remarkable feat of maritime exploration in human history. It occurred in two major phases separated by ~4
L_2_18 — Archaic Admixture in Africa (Ghost Populations)
While Neanderthal and Denisovan admixture in non-African populations has been well-documented since Svante Pääbo's landmark 2010 Neanderthal genome paper, evidence for archaic admixture within Africa represents a more re
L_3_01 — Serpent Symbolism in Genetics (Caduceus / DNA)
Entwined-serpent and serpent-on-staff motifs are genuinely widespread in the historical record, and the visual resemblance between some of these images and the modern DNA double helix is obvious to modern viewers. What i
L_3_16 — Genomic Imprinting & Evolutionary Conflict
Genomic imprinting — the epigenetic phenomenon in which a subset of genes (~100–200 in mammals) are expressed from only one parental allele, with the other allele silenced by DNA methylation and histone modification esta
L_3_17 — Endogenous Retroviruses (HERVs) in the Human Genome
Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) — remnants of ancient retroviral infections that integrated into the germline DNA of human ancestors and have been vertically transmitted through the host genome for millions of year
L_3_09 — HLA Diversity and Immune System Evolution
The Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) system — the human version of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) found in all jawed vertebrates — is the most polymorphic gene region in the entire human genome. Located on chrom
L_3_05 — Blood Type Genetics and the ABO System
Blood group genetics represents one of the earliest and most clinically important applications of Mendelian inheritance in human biology. Karl Landsteiner's discovery of the ABO blood group system (1900–1901) — which ear
L_3_18 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Eukaryotes
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) — the movement of genetic material between organisms through mechanisms other than vertical parent-to-offspring inheritance — was long considered a predominantly prokaryotic phenomenon, cen
L_3_03 — Lactase Persistence and Gene-Culture Coevolution
Lactase persistence — the ability of adults to digest the milk sugar lactose — is the most thoroughly documented case of gene-culture coevolution in the human species. The ancestral mammalian condition is lactase non-per
L_3_02 — Caduceus / Twin-Serpent / DNA Symbolism
This document surveys the widespread twin-serpent-on-axis motif and compares it with the modern DNA double helix. The iconography itself is real and historically well documented, and the molecular structure of DNA is lik
L_3_08 — Genetics of Skin, Hair, and Eye Color
Human pigmentation — skin, hair, and eye color — is one of the best-understood complex traits in human genetics, with a relatively modest number of genes explaining a large proportion of variation compared to most polyge
L_3_07 — Behavioral Genetics: Nature and Nurture
Behavioral genetics — the scientific study of how genetic and environmental factors contribute to individual differences in behavior — has transformed our understanding of human psychology over the past half-century. Thr
L_5_05 — Epigenetic Clocks: Measuring Biological Age
Epigenetic clocks are mathematical models that estimate biological age — the physiological age of an organism's cells and tissues — based on DNA methylation patterns at specific CpG sites (regions where a cytosine nucleo
L_5_01 — Human Microbiome and Co-Evolution
The human microbiome — the aggregate community of microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses, protists) living on and within the human body — comprises roughly 38 trillion microbial cells (Sender et al., 2016, Cel
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