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 83 of 124
O_2_01 — Volcanism, Supervolcanoes, and Geological Catastrophism
Volcanic eruptions are among the most powerful forces on Earth, capable of altering global climate, triggering mass extinctions, collapsing civilizations, and imprinting themselves on human mythology for millennia. The T
O_2_07 — Anomalous Animal Behavior Before Earthquakes and Storms
Reports of anomalous animal behavior preceding earthquakes and severe weather events span millennia and cultures: the earliest known written account dates to 373 BCE (Diodorus Siculus describing rats, weasels, snakes, an
O_2_08 — Weathering, Erosion, and Deep Time Landscape Evolution
Weathering (the in-situ breakdown of rock and minerals) and erosion (the transport of weathered material by water, wind, ice, and gravity) are the fundamental surface processes that, operating over deep time (millions to
O_2_16 — Mineralogy and Petrology
Mineralogy — the study of minerals (naturally occurring, inorganic crystalline solids with definite chemical composition) — and petrology — the study of rocks (aggregates of minerals) — together provide the foundation of
O_4_13 — Rainbow Mountains: Zhangye Danxia and Chromatic Geology
The world's "Rainbow Mountains" — strikingly multicolored geological formations displaying vivid bands of red, orange, yellow, green, blue-gray, and white rock — represent some of Earth's most visually spectacular natura
O_4_01 — Anomalous Zones: Skinwalker Ranch, Bermuda Triangle & Window Areas
"Anomalous zones" — geographic areas with allegedly high concentrations of unexplained phenomena — range from the verified-as-government-studied (Skinwalker Ranch/AAWSAP) to the largely debunked (Bermuda Triangle). Skinw
O_4_04 — Ringing Rocks, Musical Stones & Lithophones
Ringing rocks — stones that produce clear, bell-like tones when struck — have been documented at multiple locations worldwide, formed from rock types with specific mineralogical and structural properties that support mec
O_4_08 — Fairy Circles and Patterned Ground
Earth's landscapes display numerous striking self-organized geometric patterns — regular arrangements of vegetation, soil, stones, or ice that emerge spontaneously from physical and biological processes without any exter
O_4_06 — Crystalline Formations and Mineral Caves
Underground crystalline formations represent some of Earth's most visually spectacular geological phenomena, produced by processes ranging from slow mineral precipitation over millions of years to rapid crystal growth in
O_3_17 — Ocean Acoustic Phenomena: The Bloop, the 52-Hz Whale, and SOFAR Channel Mysteries
The ocean produces a rich acoustic environment, and several unexplained or initially mysterious sound detections have captured scientific and public attention since the deployment of deep-ocean hydrophone arrays. [KEY FI
O_3_05 — Rivers as Arteries — Freshwater Systems and Sacred Hydrology
Rivers have served as the circulatory system of human civilization since the earliest settlements along the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, and Yellow River valleys. Across virtually every culture, rivers are not merely r
O_3_16 — Underwater Anomaly Catalog
Underwater anomalies range from confirmed submerged archaeological sites (Pavlopetri, Dwarka, Heracleion) to ambiguous geological/archaeological features (Yonaguni, Bimini Road, Baltic Sea Anomaly) to outright unexplaine
O_3_12 — Cenote and Sinkhole Ecology — Surface-Groundwater Connections
Cenotes (from the Maya ts'onot) and sinkholes — natural depressions or holes formed by the dissolution of soluble bedrock (limestone, dolostone, gypsum) in karst landscapes — are far more than geological curiosities. The
O_3_08 — Subterranean Rivers and Underground Water Systems
Subterranean rivers and underground water systems represent one of Earth's most extensive yet least visible hydrological features — approximately 30% of the world's freshwater (excluding ice caps) exists as groundwater,
O_3_02 — Sacred Water: Wells, Springs, and Purification Rites
Water occupies a unique position in human religious experience — simultaneously the substance of creation (primordial waters from which the cosmos emerged), the medium of purification (baptism, mikveh, wuḍūʾ), the portal
O_3_07 — Coral Reefs as Ancient Climate Archives
Coral skeletons serve as high-resolution natural archives of past ocean and climate conditions, recording temperature, salinity, ocean chemistry, and volcanic events in their calcium carbonate growth bands — much like tr
O_5_03 — Wildfires, Fire Ecology, and Pyrogeography
Fire is one of Earth's most powerful and pervasive ecological forces — not an aberration but a fundamental natural process that has shaped terrestrial ecosystems for at least 420 million years (the earliest charcoal evid
O_5_10 — Petrified Forests: Mineralization and Deep-Time Preservation
Petrified forests — accumulations of fossilized wood in which the original organic material has been replaced or infilled by minerals (most commonly silica in the form of quartz, chalcedony, opal, or agate) — provide ext
O_5_19 — Pacific Ocean Anomalies: Ring of Fire, Deep-Sea Mysteries, and Tectonic Frontiers
The Pacific Ocean — Earth's largest and deepest body of water — concentrates a disproportionate share of geological anomalies. The Ring of Fire encircles it with 75% of the world's active volcanoes and 90% of earthquakes
O_5_09 — Karst Topography: Towers, Sinkholes, and Dissolved Landscapes
Karst topography is a distinctive landscape formed by the chemical dissolution of soluble bedrock — primarily limestone (CaCO₃), but also dolomite, gypsum, and evaporites — by naturally acidic water (CO₂-enriched rainwat
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