This document presents Part II of the Lunar Gravity Plough theory: The Evidence Base. Building upon the conceptual framework introduced in Part I, this work offers a comprehensive synthesis of multidisciplinary evidence, bridging paleoanthropology, chronobiology, fluid dynamics, and planetary science. The author proposes an integrated perspective on the history of the biosphere, viewed as a deterministic process governed by the physics of lunar tides. The study explores the biomechanical origins of bipedalism through unique observations of primates in natural aquatic habitats, identifies relic 12-hour genetic rhythms conserved in the human brain, and examines the hydrodynamic sculpting of early life forms and their transition to land. Furthermore, it investigates the geodynamic resonance recorded in lunar geochemistry and Earth's internal turbulence as a direct signature of mutual gravitational locking. Written to be accessible to the informed reader while maintaining the rigor required for expert analysis, this work serves as a springboard for interdisciplinary dialogue. It invites the scientific community to re-evaluate the Moon's role not merely as a satellite, but as the primary architect of Earth's biological complexity.
Dmytro Vechirko (Wed,) studied this question.