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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
552 results for "cultural astronomy" — page 11 of 28
INTERDOC_49 — Buddhist Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against Buddhist Traditions
Buddhist suppression spans 2,200 years across three continents and at least six distinct persecutor categories: (1) Zoroastrian/Sasanian — the priest Kartir (3rd century CE) suppressed Buddhism, Manichaeism, and Christia
INTERDOC_28 — The Death-Rebirth Universal Pattern
The death-rebirth motif appears in every known mythological system: Osiris (Egyptian — murdered by Set, dismembered, reassembled by Isis, resurrected as lord of the afterlife, ~2400 BCE in Pyramid Texts), Inanna/Ishtar (
INTERDOC_19 — Cosmic Impact, Mythology, and Cultural Memory
[KEY FINDING] The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) — first proposed by Richard Firestone, Allen West, and Simon Warwick-Smith (2006–2007) — argues that a cosmic impact or airburst event ~12,800 BP triggered the You
ZB_5_30 — Phosphorus Cycle: Biogeochemistry, Eutrophication, and the Coming Scarcity Crisis
Phosphorus (P) is the rate-limiting nutrient for life on Earth — essential to DNA, RNA, ATP (the universal energy currency), cell membranes (phospholipids), and bone (hydroxyapatite), yet available in nature only through
ZB_4_13 — Historical Ecology: Human-Ecosystem Co-Evolution through Time
Historical ecology investigates how human land use, management, domestication, exploitation, and settlement over centuries to millennia have shaped contemporary ecosystems, landscapes, and biodiversity patterns — reveali
ZC_3_13 — Human Rights: Universal Norms and Their Contested Foundations
Human rights — entitlements and protections considered inherent to all human beings regardless of nationality, ethnicity, sex, language, religion, or other status — constitute one of the most influential normative framew
ZC_3_01 — Migration and Diaspora Studies
Migration studies examines the causes, processes, and consequences of human movement across geographic and political boundaries, while diaspora studies focuses on dispersed communities maintaining connections to homeland
ZC_4_07 — Childhood and the Anthropology of Growing Up
The anthropology of childhood — the cross-cultural study of how children are conceived of, raised, taught, disciplined, initiated, and transformed into culturally competent adults — challenges the assumption that childho
ZC_4_05 — Tourism, Heritage, and the Anthropology of Sacred Sites
The anthropology of tourism and heritage examines how places, objects, and practices are designated as culturally significant, how they are consumed by visitors, and who controls the narratives, profits, and meanings at
ZC_4_20 — Ecological Anthropology: Human-Environment Interaction Beyond Subsistence
Ecological anthropology — the study of how human cultures interact with, adapt to, transform, and are shaped by their environments — has evolved from deterministic models ("environment shapes culture") through cultural e
ZC_2_04 — Sociology of Education
The sociology of education examines how educational institutions produce, reproduce, and sometimes challenge social inequalities — investigating the relationship between schooling, social class, race, gender, and economi
G_4_16 — Comparative Mythology as Science — Phylogenetic and Statistical Approaches
Comparative mythology — the systematic study of myths and folktales across cultures to identify shared elements, trace historical relationships, and understand the cognitive and social processes that generate mythologica
G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment
Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c
G_4_08 — Graham Hancock — Data-Driven Evaluation of Claims
Graham Hancock (b. 1950, Edinburgh) is a British journalist and author who has become the most prominent advocate of the "lost civilization" hypothesis — the idea that an advanced civilization existed before the end of t
G_4_12 — Citizen Science and Open-Source Research
Citizen science — the systematic involvement of non-professional volunteers in scientific research through data collection, classification, analysis, or distributed computation — has emerged as a powerful modern framewor
G_2_16 — Phylogenetic Methods in Material Culture Analysis
Phylogenetic methods — originally developed in evolutionary biology to reconstruct the branching history of species from shared inherited characteristics — have been adapted for analyzing the evolutionary (descent-with-m
G_2_06 — Landscape Archaeology and Spatial Analysis
Landscape archaeology — the study of how past peoples shaped, inhabited, and understood their physical environments at scales beyond the individual site — has evolved from early settlement-pattern surveys into a sophisti
G_2_05 — Graph Theory and Knowledge Network Analysis
Graph theory — the mathematical study of networks of nodes (vertices) connected by edges (links) — provides a rigorous framework for analyzing the structure of connections in systems ranging from ancient social hierarchi
G_2_02 — Agent-Based Modeling and Social Simulation
Agent-based modeling (ABM) is a computational framework in which large numbers of autonomous "agents" — each following simple, individually specified rules — interact with one another and their environment, and complex c
O_5_03 — Wildfires, Fire Ecology, and Pyrogeography
Fire is one of Earth's most powerful and pervasive ecological forces — not an aberration but a fundamental natural process that has shaped terrestrial ecosystems for at least 420 million years (the earliest charcoal evid
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