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.
1,985 results for "the Hum" — page 80 of 100
E_1_14 — Supernovae in Human History: Crab Nebula, SN 1006, Vela
Supernovae — the catastrophic explosions of massive stars (core-collapse, Type II/Ib/Ic) or white dwarfs exceeding the Chandrasekhar mass limit (thermonuclear, Type Ia) — are among the most energetic events in the univer
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_06 — Chicxulub Impact and the K-Pg Boundary
Approximately 66 million years ago, at the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods (K-Pg boundary, formerly K-T boundary), a ~10 km diameter asteroid struck what is now the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, crea
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_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th
E_5_02 — The Ordovician-Silurian Mass Extinction
The Late Ordovician mass extinction (c. 445–444 million years ago, at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary) was the second-most severe extinction event in Earth's history in terms of percentage of species lost — approximatel
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_08 — Neurolinguistics: Broca, Wernicke, Imaging, and the Language Brain
Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural basis of language — investigates how the brain represents, processes, produces, and comprehends language, drawing on evidence from brain lesions (aphasia studies), electrophysio
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
ZG_1_16 — Rongorongo: The Undeciphered Script of Rapa Nui
Rongorongo is a system of glyphs discovered on wooden tablets and other artifacts from Rapa Nui (Easter Island), first reported to the outside world by Eugène Eyraud, a French missionary, in 1864. Approximately 26 surviv
ZG_1_08 — Phoenician Alphabet — The Revolution from Consonants to Letters
The Phoenician alphabet — a 22-letter consonantal ("abjad") script developed by Phoenician-speaking Canaanites along the Levantine coast by ~1050 BCE — is arguably the single most consequential writing innovation in huma
ZG_1_02 — Cuneiform — The World's First Writing System
Cuneiform — from Latin cuneus ("wedge") — is the earliest known writing system, invented in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) by the Sumerians circa 3400–3100 BCE in the city of Uruk. It began as a system of pictographi
ZG_4_04 — Rhetoric and Propaganda — The Power of Persuasive Language
Rhetoric — the art of persuasion through language — is one of the oldest disciplines in Western intellectual history, codified by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a systematic teachable art (technē) with principles appli
ZG_3_02 — FOXP2 and the Genetics of Language
FOXP2 (Forkhead Box Protein P2) is the first gene directly linked to human speech and language ability, located on chromosome 7q31 and encoding a transcription factor that regulates hundreds of downstream genes involved
ZG_3_03 — Phonetics and the International Phonetic Alphabet
Phonetics is the scientific study of speech sounds — how they are produced by the human vocal tract (articulatory phonetics), how they propagate as acoustic signals (acoustic phonetics), and how they are perceived by the
ZG_3_16 — Sign Language Typology: Structure, Diversity, and the Linguistics of Gesture
Sign languages — natural human languages that use the visual-gestural modality rather than the vocal-auditory channel — are among the most powerful demonstrations that human linguistic capacity is not bound to speech. Th
ZG_3_13 — Clicks and Rare Phonemes: Extreme Sounds of Human Speech
The human vocal tract is capable of producing an extraordinary range of speech sounds — far more than any single language uses. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) catalogs over 100 consonant symbols and 28 vowel s
ZG_3_01 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis — Does Language Shape Thought?
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — more precisely, the principle of linguistic relativity — proposes that the structure of a language influences or determines the habitual thought patterns, perception, and worldview of its spe
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields