Doesn't water freeze at different temperatures depending on the local pressure?
That effect is well-known in chemistry, phase diagrams are a common tool to describe this.
Linked is a phase diagram of water - the phases "Liquid" and "Ih" are commonly known as liquid water and normal ice, but at high pressures other phases exist. Note that this diagram is by no means complete - further to the right there's water vapor, then at higher pressures supercritical water, then gradually water is not favoured anymore and Hydrogen/Oxygen are stable, and even further out there's a smooth transition to plasma - nonrelativistic an...
New Salt Compounds Challenge the Foundation of Chemistry
The title is overblown (it depends on what you think the foundation is), but get a load of this:
And here's the philosophical bit:
The obvious example of local truth is relativistic effects being pretty much invisible over the durations and distances that are normal for people, but there's also that the surface of the earth is near enough to flat for many human purposes.
Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?