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Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
345 results for "AMA" — page 12 of 18
D_2_13 — Palmyra: Crossroads of Civilizations
Palmyra (ancient Tadmor; Arabic: Tadmur) — an oasis city in the Syrian desert approximately 215 km northeast of Damascus — rose to extraordinary prominence between the first and third centuries CE as a caravan trade hub
D_4_05 — LiDAR Archaeology: Revolutionary Remote Sensing Discoveries
LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) has transformed archaeology by enabling researchers to see through dense vegetation and map landscapes at centimeter-level resolution, revealing previously unknown structures, roads, c
B_5_08 — New Animism: Relational Ontology and Perspectivism
"New animism" refers to a scholarly reinterpretation of animism — the attribution of life, intentionality, personhood, or agency to non-human entities (animals, plants, stones, rivers, weather phenomena, artifacts) — tha
B_5_11 — Plant Spirits and Green Man: Vegetation Entities Worldwide
Plant spirits and vegetation entities — supernatural beings inhabiting, embodying, or governing plant life — represent one of the oldest layers of religious thought, reflecting humanity's absolute dependence on the veget
B_5_19 — Mother Goddess Traditions: Fertility, Earth, and the Sacred Feminine
The veneration of a maternal or earth-associated female divine figure appears across virtually every documented human culture — from Paleolithic Venus figurines (c. 40,000 BCE) through Neolithic Çatalhöyük (c. 7500 BCE)
B_4_12 — Tengu, Oni, and Japanese Supernatural Taxonomy
Japanese tradition preserves one of the world's most elaborate and systematized supernatural taxonomies — a vast ecosystem of non-human beings encompassing kami (gods/spirits), yōkai (strange beings), yūrei (ghosts), oni
B_4_04 — Demon Taxonomy Across Cultures — Asuras, Rakshasas, Oni, Ifrit
Every known civilization has developed taxonomies of malevolent or adversarial supernatural beings — entities that oppose cosmic order, threaten human welfare, or embody chaotic forces. These classifications range from t
B_4_05 — Ancestor Spirits and Ancestral Worship Traditions
Ancestor veneration is arguably the most universal religious practice in human history, attested in every inhabited continent from the Neolithic onward. It rests on a shared premise: the dead do not disappear but persist
B_4_14 — Valkyries and Warrior Spirit Women: Norse, Celtic, Slavic
Warrior spirit women — supernatural female figures who choose, accompany, or determine the fate of warriors in battle — constitute a distinctive category of being that crosses the boundaries between deity, spirit, and pe
B_4_03 — Psychopomp Traditions — Guides of the Dead Across Cultures
A psychopomp (from Greek psychopompos — "guide of souls") is a being, deity, spirit, or figure whose primary function is to escort the dead from the world of the living to the afterlife. This is one of the most universal
B_4_07 — Nature Spirits, Elementals, and Land Wights
Across every inhabited continent, human cultures have independently developed traditions of intelligent, non-human entities inhabiting natural features — trees, rivers, mountains, stones, winds, and fires. This document
B_2_25 — Chaos Monster: Primordial Beasts and Cosmic Combat Mythology
The chaos monster — a primordial beast of immense power that must be defeated, dismembered, or contained for the ordered cosmos to exist — is one of the foundational mythological structures worldwide, termed Chaoskampf (
B_2_01 — Reptilian Beings Overview
Reptilian/serpent beings constitute the single most widespread non-human archetype across human civilizations. Every major culture on Earth independently developed traditions of intelligent serpentine or reptilian entiti
B_1_25 — Ocean Deity: Sea Gods and Maritime Divine Figures
Ocean deities — gods, goddesses, and spirits who personify, control, or inhabit the sea — appear in every maritime and coastal culture on Earth, reflecting the ocean's dual nature as provider and destroyer. In Greek myth
B_1_08 — Horned Deities: Pan, Cernunnos, Pashupati, and the Devil's Horns
Horned deities — divine or semi-divine beings depicted with animal horns or antlers — represent one of the most persistent and contested iconographic traditions in world religion. From the "Sorcerer" of Trois-Frères (c.
B_1_22 — Psychopomp: Death Guide Comparative Across World Mythology
A psychopomp (Greek: ψυχοπομπός, "guide of souls," from psyche "soul" + pompos "conductor") is a being — god, angel, spirit, animal, or human specialist — whose role is to escort the souls of the dead from the world of t
B_1_14 — Destroyer and Chaos Deities: Shiva, Kali, Sekhmet, Apollyon
Destroyer and chaos deities — divine figures whose function is to unmake, dissolve, or return the cosmos to primordial disorder — occupy a theologically essential but often misunderstood role in world religion. Destructi
B_1_17 — Underworld Deities: Ereshkigal, Hades, Hel, and the Rulers of the Dead
Every major world civilization has produced deities or supernatural rulers associated with death and the underworld. The Sumerian Ereshkigal (attested from the 3rd millennium BCE), the Greek Hades (first named in the Ili
B_3_04 — Chimeric Beings — Centaurs, Sphinxes, Minotaurs, and Composite Entities
Composite beings — entities combining human and animal features — appear in the art and mythology of every major civilization. From the Egyptian Sphinx and Mesopotamian Lamassu to the Greek Centaur, Hindu Garuda, and Mes
B_3_10 — World Tree Guardians and Cosmic Serpents
The World Tree — a colossal tree (or pillar, mountain, or vine) connecting the layers of the cosmos (typically underworld, earth, and heavens) — is one of the most widespread cosmological concepts in human mythology, app
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