{
    "system": "GoGuides Verified Text",
    "api_version": "verified-text-v1",
    "status": "ok",
    "response_type": "verified_text_record",
    "source_key": "britannica_1911",
    "source_title": "Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911)",
    "license_code": "public_domain",
    "attribution": null,
    "license_url": null,
    "chunk_id": "1911:botree:4052daf2b9b0",
    "title": "BO-TREE",
    "section": null,
    "hash_alg": "sha256",
    "hash_sha256": "1f36fe14b4a6d7044db9167b50d51c3c80c851dfd5d07328fb5dacd50c7f6e7c",
    "normalizer": {
        "name": "ggnorm",
        "version": "1.0"
    },
    "verified_text": "bo-tree, or bodhi-tree, the name given by the buddhists of india and ceylon to the pipul or sacred wild fig (_ficus religiosa_). it is regarded as sacred, and one at least is planted near each temple. these are traditionally supposed to be derived from the original one, the bodhi-tree of buddhist annals, beneath which the buddha is traditionally supposed to have attained perfect knowledge. the bo-tree at the ruined city of anuradhapura, 80 m. north of kandy, grown from a branch of the parent-tree sent to ceylon from india by king asoka in the 3rd century",
    "source_url": "https://archive.org/details/EB1911WMF",
    "observed_at": "2026-02-08 18:42:38",
    "integrity": {
        "hash_check": "match",
        "hash_scope": "full_normalized_text",
        "computed_sha256": "1f36fe14b4a6d7044db9167b50d51c3c80c851dfd5d07328fb5dacd50c7f6e7c"
    },
    "machine_use": {
        "read": true,
        "cite": true,
        "decision": "verified_public_domain_text"
    },
    "documentation": {
        "white_paper_url": "https://www.goguides.com/white-paper.php",
        "pdf_url": "https://www.goguides.com/whitepapers/goguides-ai-source-clearance-white-paper.pdf"
    }
}