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 91 of 112
R_5_19 — Evolutionary Game Theory: Cooperation, Altruism, and Strategy in Nature
Evolutionary game theory applies mathematical game theory to biological evolution, explaining how natural selection favors strategies for survival and reproduction in competitive and cooperative interactions. The field's
ZB_1_03 — Artificial Life, Emergence, and Digital Evolution
Artificial life (ALife) is an interdisciplinary field studying life-as-it-could-be through computational, chemical, and robotic systems that exhibit lifelike behaviors — self-replication, evolution, emergence, and adapta
R_2_05 — Missing Fossil Record and Punctuated Equilibrium
Darwin himself called the fossil record "the most obvious and gravest objection which can be urged against my theory" — because if evolution occurred through gradual transformation, we should find smooth transitional seq
R_2_04 — Homo Floresiensis: The Hobbit Mystery
In 2003, a team of Australian and Indonesian archaeologists discovered a tiny, near-complete hominin skeleton in Liang Bua cave on the island of Flores, Indonesia. Designated Homo floresiensis (Brown et al. 2004, Nature)
R_2_14 — Recent Human Evolution: Lactase Persistence, Altitude Adaptation, and Malaria Resistance
Human evolution did not stop with the emergence of Homo sapiens ~300,000 years ago — natural selection has continued to shape human biology in response to agriculture, diet, disease, climate, and altitude, producing some
R_2_07 — Stoned Ape Hypothesis — Psilocybin, Cognitive Evolution, and the McKenna Theory
The "Stoned Ape Hypothesis," proposed by ethnobotanist Terence McKenna in Food of the Gods (1992), posits that the consumption of psilocybin-containing mushrooms by early hominids (particularly Homo erectus and Homo erga
R_2_02 — Convergent Evolution and the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis
Convergent evolution — the independent development of similar features in unrelated lineages — is one of biology's most profound patterns. Eyes evolved independently at least 40-65 times (Fernald 2006). Echolocation evol
R_2_01 — Human Brain Evolution and the Cognitive Revolution
The human brain tripled in size over 3 million years — from ~400 cm³ (Australopithecus) to ~1,400 cm³ (modern Homo sapiens). This is the most dramatic encephalization in the history of life, and NO consensus exists on wh
R_2_03 — Neanderthal Cognition and Interbreeding
For over a century, Neanderthals were depicted as brutish, cognitively inferior "cave men" — a failed evolutionary experiment replaced by superior modern humans. This narrative has been DEMOLISHED by 21st-century genetic
R_2_10 — Primate Evolution and the Hominid Lineage
The order Primates, originating ~65–80 million years ago, encompasses prosimians (lemurs, tarsiers), monkeys, and apes. The human lineage (Hominini) diverged from the chimpanzee lineage ~6–7 Mya, based on molecular clock
R_2_08 — Bipedalism — Why We Walk Upright and What It Cost Us
Bipedalism — habitual upright walking on two legs — is the defining characteristic of the hominin lineage, predating brain enlargement, tool use, and language by millions of years. The earliest evidence comes from Sahela
R_1_11 — Extinction, Recovery, and Adaptive Radiation
The history of life is punctuated by mass extinction events — catastrophic biodiversity losses that eliminate >75% of species in geologically brief intervals — followed by recovery phases and adaptive radiations during w
R_1_13 — Archaea: The Third Domain and Extremophilic Diversity
Archaea constitute the third domain of life — neither Bacteria nor Eukarya — recognized as a distinct lineage by Carl Woese and George Fox in 1977 through revolutionary 16S ribosomal RNA phylogenetic analysis. For decade
R_1_01 — Abiogenesis & Origin of Life Theories
Abiogenesis — the emergence of life from non-living chemistry — remains one of the deepest unsolved problems in science. The oldest confirmed microfossils date to ~3.5 billion years ago (Pilbara, Western Australia), with
R_1_07 — Viruses as Evolutionary Drivers — Endogenous Retroviruses and Genomic Integration
Viruses are not merely disease agents — they are fundamental architects of evolution. The human genome contains approximately ~8% endogenous retroviral (ERV) sequences (~100,000 ERV fragments), meaning roughly eight time
R_1_05 — Quantum Biology
Until recently, quantum effects were thought impossible in warm, wet biological systems. The standard assumption held that thermal noise at physiological temperatures (~310 K) would destroy quantum coherence within femto
R_1_02 — The Cambrian Explosion
Between ~541 and ~520 million years ago, nearly ALL major animal body plans (phyla) appeared in the fossil record in an evolutionary "instant" — roughly 20 million years. Before this, life had been single-celled for ~3 b
R_1_06 — Symbiogenesis — Lynn Margulis and Cooperative Evolution
Symbiogenesis — the evolutionary origin of new organisms, organelles, or metabolic capabilities through the permanent merger of previously independent life forms — is one of the most consequential biological discoveries
R_1_19 — Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Origin of Life
The deep-sea hydrothermal vent hypothesis for the origin of life proposes that life on Earth began at submarine hydrothermal systems — either high-temperature black smoker vents (>350°C, acidic, rich in transition metals
R_1_14 — Biofilms: Microbial Communities, Quorum Sensing, and Cooperation
Biofilms are structured communities of microorganisms — bacteria, archaea, fungi, and algae — attached to surfaces and embedded in a self-produced matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS): polysaccharides, prot
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