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.
3,050 results for "hi no tama" — page 89 of 153
E_4_03 — Paleomagnetism & Geomagnetic Excursions
Earth's magnetic field periodically undergoes dramatic excursions and full polarity reversals, with profound physical consequences including weakened radiation shielding, increased UV exposure, and ozone depletion. The L
E_4_21 — Oxygen Isotope Stages: Marine Isotope Record and Climate Cycles
The marine oxygen isotope record — constructed from measurements of the ratio of oxygen-18 to oxygen-16 (δ¹⁸O) in the calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) shells of foraminifera (single-celled marine organisms) preserved in deep-se
E_4_13 — Milankovitch Cycles and Orbital Forcing
Milankovitch cycles are periodic variations in Earth's orbital geometry that modulate the distribution and intensity of solar radiation reaching Earth's surface, driving the glacial-interglacial cycles that have dominate
E_4_26 — Younger Dryas Impact Evidence: A Comprehensive Review
The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) proposes that one or more extraterrestrial objects (comet or asteroid fragments) struck or exploded over the Earth approximately 12,900 years ago (12.9 ka BP), triggering the Yo
E_4_11 — The Holocene Climate Optimum and Mid-Holocene Transition
The Holocene Climate Optimum (also called the Holocene Thermal Maximum or Hypsithermal) designates a prolonged warm interval roughly spanning 9,000–5,000 years before present, during which Northern Hemisphere summer temp
E_4_09 — Magnetic Pole Reversals and the Laschamp Event
Earth's magnetic field periodically undergoes geomagnetic reversals — events in which the north and south magnetic poles swap polarity. This has occurred at least 183 times in the last 83 million years, with the last ful
E_4_16 — Cosmogenic Isotope Dating: Beryllium-10 and Exposure Ages
Cosmogenic nuclide dating (also called cosmogenic exposure dating or terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide, TCN, dating) is a geochronological method that determines how long a rock surface has been exposed at or near Earth's s
E_4_08 — The 3102/3114 BCE Epoch Date Parallel
This document examines The 3102/3114 BCE Epoch Date Parallel, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include The Hindu Kali Yuga — February 17/18, 3102 BCE, The Maya Long C
E_1_02 — Meteor and Asteroid Impacts on Earth
This document examines Meteor and Asteroid Impacts on Earth, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Notable findings include: The Finnish Kalevala describes a "fire-child" stolen from heaven that bur
E_1_15 — Uranium-Thorium Dating: Methodology and Applications in Deep Time
Uranium-thorium (U-Th) dating, also called uranium-series disequilibrium dating, is a radiometric technique that measures the decay of ²³⁴U to ²³⁰Th (half-life: ~245,620 years) in materials such as speleothems (cave form
E_5_08 — Justinianic Plague & Late Antique Pandemics
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) was the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis, striking the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's reconquest campaigns. A
ZG_2_16 — Khoisan Click Languages & African Linguistic Diversity
Click consonants — produced by rarefaction of air using the tongue against various parts of the oral cavity — are among the most phonetically complex sounds in human language, found as regular phonemes in approximately 3
ZG_2_01 — Proto-Indo-European — Reconstruction, Homeland, and Migration
Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European language family — the most widely spoken language family on Earth, encompassing ~3.2 billion native speakers across branches including I
ZG_2_09 — Tok Pisin, Lingua Francas, and Global Contact Languages
A lingua franca (from medieval Italian — originally denoting the pidginized Romance-based trade language of the Mediterranean, the "Frankish tongue") is any language used as a common medium of communication between speak
ZG_2_05 — Sacred Languages — Sanskrit, Hebrew, Arabic, Latin
Across civilizations, certain languages have been elevated above the ordinary functions of communication to the status of sacred or liturgical languages — vehicles believed to possess special power by virtue of their con
ZG_2_11 — Language Isolates: Basque, Ainu, Sumerian, Burushaski
A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genealogical (genetic) relationship with any other known language — it stands alone, unrelated to any language family, a sole surviving branch on the tree of huma
ZG_2_12 — Language Contact and Substrate Effects in Ancient Civilizations
Language contact — the situation in which speakers of different languages interact and their languages influence one another — is one of the most powerful forces shaping linguistic change, and its effects are pervasive t
ZG_1_14 — Mesoamerican Writing Systems: Zapotec, Mixtec, and Aztec Codices
Beyond the celebrated Maya script (the only fully developed logosyllabic writing system in the pre-Columbian Americas), Mesoamerica produced a remarkable diversity of writing and recording systems that ranged from the ea
ZG_1_15 — African Writing Systems: Bamum, Vai, N'Ko, Ge'ez, and Nsibidi
Africa has produced a remarkable diversity of indigenous writing systems spanning millennia — from the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics (c. 3200 BCE) and Meroitic script (c. 300 BCE, Kingdom of Kush) to scores of modern sc
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
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