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Three-stage pipeline (Extract → Transform → Load) using ruvector-solver: - Extract: loads 460+ discoveries from 48 JSON data sources - Transform: embeds into 64-dim vectors, builds 8-NN sparse graph, runs ForwardPush PPR (sublinear O(1/ε), Andersen-Chung-Lang 2006) - Load: outputs ranked cross-domain correlations + 12×12 domain matrix New data sources from parallel explorer swarms: - Humanities: Harvard Art, Library of Congress, Open Library, Nobel, Smithsonian - Genetics/Env: ClinVar variants, GBIF endangered, EPA air, marine, satellite fires - Tech/Infra: GitHub trending, Hacker News, SpaceX, ISS, crypto/forex markets Novel discoveries found by PPR: - Technology→Earth climate correlation (equatorial weather patterns) - Technology→Space-science link (ultra-short period brown dwarf) - Life-science→Academic (agentic AI + GPCR drug discovery bridge) https://claude.ai/code/session_01UWE22wnsZRSHKhT4h4Axby
72 lines
No EOL
3.8 KiB
JSON
72 lines
No EOL
3.8 KiB
JSON
[
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{
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"title": "The Nation's T. rex (Wankel Rex)",
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"content": "One of the world's most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossils, 85% complete. Discovered in Montana in 1988 in the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. Centerpiece of the David H. Koch Hall of Fossils - Deep Time.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.95
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},
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{
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"title": "Allosaurus fragilis Type Specimen",
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"content": "Officially named the type specimen for the entire Allosaurus fragilis species. Notable because all bones came from a single individual rather than being a composite. Displayed crouching like a modern bird guarding a clutch of fossilized eggs.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.93
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},
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{
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"title": "Stegosaurus stenops Holotype",
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"content": "The first Stegosaurus stenops specimen ever scientifically described, defining what it means to be the species. Displayed alongside its fossil foe Allosaurus, plus Diplodocus and Camarasaurus sauropods.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.93
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},
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{
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"title": "Pachycephalosaurus Skull (2024 Acquisition)",
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"content": "Remarkably complete skull of Pachycephalosaurus, a dome-headed dinosaur from the end of the Cretaceous Period (~67 million years ago). Unearthed in South Dakota in 2024, purchased at Sotheby's and gifted by Eric and Wendy Schmidt.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.92
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},
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{
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"title": "David H. Koch Hall of Fossils - Deep Time",
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"content": "After a four-year, $125 million renovation, the hall features 700+ fossil specimens including a palm tree from Alaska, a T. rex vs Triceratops battle scene, early reptiles and mammals, and a woolly mammoth.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.94
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},
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{
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"title": "Triceratops horridus Specimen",
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"content": "Featured in the dramatic T. rex vs Triceratops display in the Deep Time hall. One of the iconic ceratopsian dinosaur specimens from the Late Cretaceous Period, approximately 68-66 million years ago.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.9
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},
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{
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"title": "Diplodocus longus Specimen",
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"content": "Sauropod dinosaur specimen from the Late Jurassic Period. Displayed alongside Camarasaurus and the Allosaurus-Stegosaurus exhibit in the Deep Time hall. One of the longest dinosaurs known.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.88
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},
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{
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"title": "Camarasaurus Specimen",
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"content": "Common sauropod from the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation. Displayed in the Hall of Fossils alongside Diplodocus, representing the diversity of large herbivorous dinosaurs from 150 million years ago.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.88
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},
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{
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"title": "Woolly Mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius)",
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"content": "Pleistocene-era specimen displayed in the Deep Time hall. Represents the Ice Age megafauna that roamed North America and Eurasia until approximately 4,000 years ago.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.9
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},
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{
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"title": "Paleobiology Collection Overview",
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"content": "The Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History holds 146+ million specimens total, with 46 complete and important dinosaur specimens. The paleontological collections comprise tens of millions of specimens from microfossils to massive dinosaur bones.",
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"timestamp": "2026-03-15T23:49:45.257025+00:00",
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"source": "smithsonian",
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"confidence": 0.92
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}
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] |