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42 results for "bird" — page 1 of 3
B_2_22 — Thunderbird: Storm Bird Mythology Across Cultures
The Thunderbird — a colossal avian being whose wingbeats produce thunder and whose eyes or beak flash lightning — is one of the most powerful and widespread figures in Indigenous North American mythology, documented acro
B_3_12 — Phoenix and Firebird: Resurrection Bird Across Cultures
The Phoenix — a mythical bird that dies in fire and is reborn from its own ashes — is among the most enduring and widespread symbols of death, regeneration, and immortality in world mythology. The concept appears in dist
M_5_02 — Saqqara Bird — Ancient Aerodynamics Debate
The Saqqara Bird is a small carved sycamore-wood artifact (catalog #6347) housed in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, dated to approximately 200 BCE (Ptolemaic period).
ZG_3_07 — Animal Communication Systems: Birdsong, Whale Song, Primate Calls
Animal communication systems — the diverse repertoires of signals (vocal, visual, chemical, tactile, electrical) by which non-human species transmit information — have been the subject of intensive study both for their o
B_3_05 — Thunderbird and Avian Supernatural Beings
Supernatural avian beings — enormous, powerful, and frequently storm-associated birds — form one of the most persistent and geographically widespread motifs in world mythology. From the Thunderbird of North American Plai
M_2_02 — Nazca Lines — Purpose, Astronomy, Water Rituals, and Modern AI Discovery
The Nazca Lines are a collection of over 1,500 geoglyphs etched into the arid Nazca Plateau of southern Peru, created primarily between 500 BCE and 500 CE by the Nazca culture. They range from simple geometric lines exte
M_1_01 — OOPArts Catalog (Out-of-Place Artifacts)
"Out-of-Place Artifacts" (OOPArts) are objects that appear anomalous for their age or context. This document catalogs 17 major OOPArts, individually rated. The critical finding: 4 are GENUINE (Tier 1) — real artifacts wi
A_1_03 — The Apkallu & Oannes: The Seven Sages Who Taught Civilization
This document examines The Apkallu & Oannes: The Seven Sages Who Taught Civilization, a topic within the Foundations research area. Notable findings include: Berossus** (Βηρωσσός) — Babylonian priest of Bel (Marduk), ~28
W_4_21 — Rapa Nui: Isolation, Ecocide Debate, and Cultural Resilience on Easter Island
Rapa Nui (Easter Island), the most isolated inhabited island in the world — 3,700 km from South America, 2,000 km from Pitcairn — was settled by Polynesian voyagers c. 1200 CE and developed a unique civilization that car
W_4_04 — Mississippian Culture — Cahokia, Mound Builders, and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
Cahokia, located near present-day East St. Louis, Illinois, was the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico, reaching a peak population of 20,000 or more around 1050-1200 CE. The site features Monks Mound — the
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_3_03 — Great Zimbabwe and Southern African Civilizations
Great Zimbabwe, located in southeastern Zimbabwe, was the capital of a prosperous Shona-speaking civilization that flourished from the 11th to 15th centuries CE, and represents the largest stone structure in sub-Saharan
ZH_3_05 — Nazca Lines: Astronomical and Ecological Hypotheses
The Nazca Lines are a vast complex of geoglyphs — ground drawings created by removing the dark, iron-oxide-coated desert pavement to reveal the lighter ground beneath — spread across the arid Pampa de Nazca and surroundi
C_3_13 — Oracle Traditions — Cross-Cultural Divination Systems
Oracular divination — the practice of seeking knowledge of the unknown or future through systematic ritual procedures — appears in virtually every known civilization, from Mesopotamian extispicy (reading animal entrails,
C_2_11 — Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive
This document examines Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Etymology and Core Identity, Olmec Origins — The Earliest Evid
ZG_3_02 — FOXP2 and the Genetics of Language
FOXP2 (Forkhead Box Protein P2) is the first gene directly linked to human speech and language ability, located on chromosome 7q31 and encoding a transcription factor that regulates hundreds of downstream genes involved
Q_4_01 — Primordial Gravitational Waves and B-Mode Polarization
Primordial gravitational waves — ripples in spacetime generated during cosmic inflation — represent one of the most sought-after signals in cosmology. Their detection would provide direct evidence that inflation occurred
ZB_1_14 — Animal Architecture: Nests, Webs, Mounds, and Biological Engineering
Animal architecture — the construction of physical structures by non-human organisms for shelter, reproduction, thermoregulation, prey capture, mate attraction, or environmental modification — represents one of the most
ZB_1_16 — Acoustic Ecology and Bioacoustics
Bioacoustics — the study of sound production, transmission, and reception in animals — and acoustic ecology (the study of organisms' relationships with their sonic environment) have revealed that the natural world is sat
ZB_1_03 — Animal Navigation and Migration — Magnetism, Stars, and Memory
Animal migration and navigation represent some of the most astonishing feats in biology: monarch butterflies traveling 4,000 km across North America using a time-compensated sun compass; Arctic terns completing 71,000-km
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