Rework continuous-improve: always enrich, add deep scan, strengthen web research
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@@ -30,12 +30,13 @@ The Roman road network was one of the greatest engineering achievements of the a
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[^1]: Laurence, R. *The Roads of Roman Italy* (Routledge, 1999)
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[^2]: Chevallier, R. *Roman Roads* (University of California Press, 1976)
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[^2]: Chevallier, R. *Roman Roads* (University of California Press, 1976)---
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## Review Queue
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<!-- factbase:review -->
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- [x] `@q[conflict]` Line 22: Cross-check with Roman Roads: Via Appia (312 BCE): "Queen of Roads," Rome to Brindisi — Fact 1 states Via Appia went from Rome to Capua, but Fact 4 states it went from Rome to Brindisi. These are contradictory endpoints for the same road.
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> Not a conflict. The Via Appia was originally built in 312 BCE from Rome to Capua (line 11), and was later extended to Brindisi/Brundisium (~264 BCE). Both statements are correct for different phases of the road's construction. Line 11 describes the initial construction; line 22 describes the completed route. The document could clarify this by noting the extension, but the facts are not contradictory.
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- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 10: "Total network: ~400,000 km (80,000 km paved)" - when was this true?
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> Static historical fact. No temporal tag needed.
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- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 11: "First major road: Via Appia (312 BCE), Rome to Capua" - when was this true?
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