RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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 97 of 124

H_2_07 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_2_07 — Radiocarbon Dating Controversies and Calibration Disputes

Radiocarbon dating — the measurement of the radioactive isotope ¹⁴C in organic materials to determine their age — is archaeology's single most important chronological tool, having revolutionized the discipline since Will

radiocarbon dating carbon-14 calibration curve IntCal Libby half-life
H_2_00 Suppression & Thesis

H_2_00 — Institutional Academic Suppression: Subfolder Summary

H_1_16 Speculative Suppression & Thesis

H_1_16 — UFO Crash Retrieval Testimony Catalog

The history of alleged UFO crash retrieval operations — in which governments or military agencies are claimed to have recovered physical wreckage and, in some accounts, occupants from downed unidentified aerial phenomena

crash retrieval Roswell UFO UAP testimony whistleblower
H_1_13 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_13 — Knowledge Loss in the Fall of Rome and Early Middle Ages

The collapse of the Western Roman Empire (conventionally dated to 476 CE, though the decline was a process spanning the 3rd–6th centuries) produced one of the most dramatic and well-documented episodes of knowledge and t

fall of rome roman collapse dark ages early middle ages knowledge loss library destruction
H_1_09 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_09 — Translation Losses and Textual Transmission Chains

Before the printing press (1440s CE), all knowledge transmission depended on manual copying (scribal reproduction of manuscripts) and oral tradition — both inherently lossy processes. Every manuscript copy introduced pot

translation loss textual transmission scribal error manuscript tradition textual criticism stemma codicum
H_1_15 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_15 — Religious Text Sanitization: Canon Formation & Apocrypha Politics

The formation of religious canons — deciding which texts are authoritative and which are excluded — represents one of history's most consequential acts of knowledge control. The Christian biblical canon evolved over cent

religious-text-sanitization canon-formation council-of-nicaea apocrypha dead-sea-scrolls-politics nag-hammadi
H_1_14 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_1_14 — Religious Text Sanitization: The Erasure and Editing of Sacred Traditions

Religious text sanitization — the deliberate editing, exclusion, suppression, or reinterpretation of sacred texts by institutional authorities to enforce doctrinal orthodoxy, eliminate heterodox teachings, or adapt tradi

text sanitization censorship apocrypha canon formation heresy Dead Sea Scrolls
H_3_19 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_19 — Indigenous Knowledge Destruction: Colonial Erasure & Residential Schools

The destruction of indigenous knowledge systems represents one of history's most comprehensive and deliberate episodes of cultural erasure, spanning from the Spanish burning of Maya codices in the 16th century to the res

indigenous-knowledge-destruction residential-schools colonial-erasure library-burning oral-tradition-suppression cultural-genocide
H_3_17 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_17 — Linguistic Genocide: Language Suppression as Cultural Erasure

Linguistic genocide — the systematic, deliberate destruction of a people's language as a means of cultural erasure — has been a consistent tool of colonial and authoritarian regimes worldwide. Distinguished from natural

linguistic genocide language suppression cultural erasure boarding schools language death linguicide
H_3_08 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_08 — Ethnobotanical Knowledge Loss and Biocultural Extinction

An estimated 80% of the world's population relies at least partially on traditional plant-based medicine (WHO estimate), and approximately 25% of modern pharmaceutical drugs are derived from or inspired by compounds firs

ethnobotany traditional ecological knowledge TEK biocultural diversity indigenous medicine medicinal plants
H_3_20 Speculative Suppression & Thesis

H_3_20 — Free Energy Suppression Claims

The claim that technologies capable of extracting "free energy" — commonly defined as usable energy extracted at no fuel cost from the quantum vacuum, ambient electromagnetic fields, or undiscovered physical mechanisms —

free energy zero-point energy Tesla suppression perpetual motion overunity
H_3_10 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?

The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de

museum ethics repatriation cultural property NAGPRA Elgin Marbles Parthenon marbles
H_4_31 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_4_31 — Media Ownership Concentration & Information Control

The progressive consolidation of media ownership in the United States and globally since the 1980s — from approximately 50 companies controlling the majority of American media in 1983 to effectively 6 major conglomerates

media ownership consolidation information control Telecommunications Act Big Six conglomerate
H_4_17 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_4_17 — Algorithmic Censorship and AI Content Moderation

Algorithmic content moderation — the use of automated systems (machine learning classifiers, natural language processing, computer vision, and large language models) to detect, flag, restrict, or remove online content —

algorithmic censorship content moderation AI moderation platform governance shadow ban demonetization
H_4_12 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_4_12 — Patent Suppression and Buried Technology

Patent suppression — the deliberate withholding, blocking, or acquisition-and-shelving of inventions through legal, corporate, or governmental mechanisms — is a documented phenomenon with both verified and mythologized d

patent suppression invention secrecy act secrecy order buried technology suppressed invention oil industry suppression
H_4_07 Suppression & Thesis

H_4_07 — History of Archaeology: From Antiquarianism to Modern Science

Archaeology as a discipline evolved from Renaissance-era antiquarian curiosity through Enlightenment collecting into a rigorous, methodologically grounded science. Key turning points include Thomsen's Three-Age System (1

archaeology antiquarianism Three-Age System processual archaeology post-processual stratigraphy
H_4_23 Credible Suppression & Thesis

H_4_23 — State Secrets and Archaeological Blackouts: Restricted Sites

Across the world, archaeological sites, historical monuments, and culturally significant locations are partially or wholly restricted from scholarly access and public knowledge due to military occupation, government secr

state secrets restricted sites classified military national security archaeological blackout
H_4_32 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent

Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of

propaganda information warfare manufactured consent Edward Bernays Chomsky psyops
P_3_02 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_02 — Pre-Socratic Philosophy — The Birth of Western Thought

The Pre-Socratic philosophers (c. 624–370 BCE) inaugurated Western philosophy by replacing mythological explanations of the natural world with rational inquiry into a single unifying principle (archê). From Thales' ident

Pre-Socratics Thales Anaximander apeiron Heraclitus logos
P_3_01 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_01 — Epistemology — How Do We Know What We Know?

Epistemology — the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature, sources, and limits of knowledge — is arguably the most foundational discipline for any research project that evaluates claims across time, culture, and

epistemology empiricism rationalism Kant Bayesian inference falsificationism