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2,446 results for "Ur dragon" — page 12 of 123

T_5_16 Verified Psychology & Social

T_5_16 — Psychoacoustics, Binaural Beats, and Sound-Mind Interaction

Psychoacoustics — the scientific study of how humans perceive sound — reveals that hearing is not a passive recording of air pressure changes but an active, constructive neural process shaped by attention, expectation, e

psychoacoustics binaural beats auditory perception brainwave entrainment frequency following response infrasound
T_5_22 Verified Psychology & Social

T_5_22 — Heuristics & Cognitive Biases: Systematic Errors in Human Judgment

Heuristics are mental shortcuts that enable fast, efficient decision-making under conditions of uncertainty — and cognitive biases are the systematic errors that result when those shortcuts misfire. The heuristics-and-bi

cognitive bias heuristics kahneman tversky prospect theory availability heuristic
D_2_10 Sites & Artifacts

D_2_10 — Nineveh and the Library of Ashurbanipal: The First Systematic Archive

Nineveh, located on the east bank of the Tigris River opposite modern Mosul in northern Iraq, was the capital of the Neo-Assyrian Empire at its zenith and the site of the world's first deliberately assembled systematic l

Nineveh Library of Ashurbanipal cuneiform Gilgamesh Flood Tablet George Smith
D_2_12 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_2_12 — Knossos and Minoan Palatial Architecture

Knossos — located approximately 5 km south of modern Heraklion on the island of Crete — is the largest and most famous Bronze Age palatial complex in the Aegean world, serving as the political, economic, and ceremonial c

Knossos Minoan Crete palace Arthur Evans labyrinth
D_2_06 Sites & Artifacts

D_2_06 — Ur: Woolley's Excavations, the Royal Cemetery, and the Standard of Ur

Ur (modern Tell al-Muqayyar, southern Iraq) is one of the most important archaeological sites in Mesopotamia. Leonard Woolley's excavations (1922–1934), conducted jointly by the British Museum and the University of Penns

Ur Leonard Woolley Royal Cemetery Puabi Standard of Ur Great Death Pit
D_5_17 Credible Sites & Artifacts

D_5_17 — Torus Geometry in Ancient Architecture

The torus — a doughnut-shaped surface of revolution generated by rotating a circle around an axis coplanar with the circle — is one of the most fundamental geometries in nature, appearing in magnetic field lines, fluid d

torus toroidal geometry sacred geometry vortex ancient architecture temple design
D_5_19 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_5_19 — Optical Illusions, Entasis, and Perceptual Engineering in Ancient Architecture

Ancient architects across multiple civilizations independently discovered and exploited principles of human visual perception — engineering deliberate optical corrections and illusions into their most important structure

optical illusion entasis Parthenon optical refinements Iktinos Kallikrates
D_5_16 Credible Sites & Artifacts

D_5_16 — Color Symbolism in Ancient Sacred Architecture

Ancient sacred buildings were never the bare stone ruins we see today. From Egyptian temples blazing with red, blue, yellow, and green to Maya pyramids coated in vivid red plaster to Greek temples painted in polychromati

color-symbolism sacred-architecture pigment-analysis red-ochre lapis-lazuli temple-color
D_5_14 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_5_14 — Gold Artifacts and Ancient Metallurgy: Technology, Trade, and Sacred Craft

Gold has been worked by human societies for over 7,000 years — from the earliest hammered ornaments found in the Balkans (~5000 BCE) to the extraordinary technical achievements of Egyptian, Etruscan, Muisca, and Moche go

gold metallurgy ancient metalworking lost-wax casting electrum Varna necropolis Muisca El Dorado
D_5_18 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_5_18 — Mandala Sacred Architecture: Cross-Cultural Cosmic Diagrams in Stone

The mandala (Sanskrit: "circle" or "completion") is a geometric diagram — typically featuring concentric circles and squares, radial symmetry, and a defined center — that functions as a map of the cosmos, a meditation ai

mandala sacred architecture Borobudur Angkor Wat Hindu temple Buddhist temple
D_3_15 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_15 — Great Enclosure of Great Zimbabwe: African Monumental Architecture

Great Zimbabwe — a medieval stone city near Masvingo in southeastern Zimbabwe — is the largest and most architecturally sophisticated pre-colonial stone structure in sub-Saharan Africa south of the Sahara. The site compr

Great Zimbabwe Great Enclosure Zimbabwe Shona dry-stone granite
D_3_17 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_17 — Sanchi Stupa and Buddhist Monumental Architecture

Sanchi — a hilltop complex near the town of Sanchi Nagar in Madhya Pradesh, central India — is the finest surviving ensemble of early Buddhist monumental architecture and one of the most important Buddhist pilgrimage and

Sanchi stupa Buddhist India Madhya Pradesh Ashoka
D_3_09 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_09 — Mohenjo-daro and Harappan Urban Planning

Mohenjo-daro ("Mound of the Dead" in Sindhi) — located in present-day Sindh province, Pakistan — is the largest and best-preserved urban center of the Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), one of the three great Bronze Age ci

Mohenjo-daro Harappa Indus Valley Civilization urban planning grid layout Great Bath
D_3_08 Sites & Artifacts

D_3_08 — Çatalhöyük: Neolithic Urbanism and the Origins of Settled Life

Çatalhöyük is a Neolithic and Chalcolithic settlement located on the Konya Plain of central Anatolia, Turkey, occupied from approximately 7500 to 5700 BCE. At its peak the site housed an estimated 3,000–8,000 inhabitants

Çatalhöyük Neolithic proto-city Konya Plain Turkey wall paintings
D_3_14 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_14 — Rock-Hewn Churches of Tigray: Beyond Lalibela

While Lalibela's eleven rock-hewn churches are world-famous, a far more extensive but less-known tradition of rock-cut church architecture extends across the Tigray Region of northern Ethiopia (and neighboring Eritrea) —

Tigray rock-hewn churches Ethiopia Aksumite Zagwe sandstone
D_3_02 Sites & Artifacts

D_3_02 — Paracas Trident, Candelabra, and Cross-Cultural Trident Symbolism

The Paracas Candelabra (also called "Candelabro de Paracas" or "the Trident") is a massive geoglyph carved into the sandy hillside of the Paracas Peninsula on Peru's southern coast, overlooking Pisco Bay. Measuring ~180

Paracas Candelabra trident Pisco Bay geoglyph Nazca Lines Paracas culture
B_5_12 Credible Beings & Entities

B_5_12 — Cognitive Science of Monster Concepts: Why Humans Invent Creatures

Why do all human cultures independently generate remarkably similar monster concepts — predatory hybrids, shape-shifters, reanimated corpses, giant serpents, invisible watchers? Cognitive science offers a compelling fram

monster concepts cognitive science agency detection predator detection minimally counterintuitive Pascal Boyer
B_5_07 Verified Beings & Entities

B_5_07 — Divine Smith and Celestial Artisan Figures

The Divine Smith — a god or supernatural being whose defining attribute is mastery of metalworking, craftsmanship, and technological creation — appears across virtually every metal-using civilization as one of the most c

divine smith celestial artisan Hephaestus Vulcan Ptah Wayland
B_4_12 Verified Beings & Entities

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

tengu oni yokai yūrei kami Japanese supernatural
B_4_08 Verified Beings & Entities

B_4_08 — Trickster Figures Across Cultures

The Trickster — a being who violates rules, transgresses boundaries, subverts authority, and through cunning, deception, and apparent chaos paradoxically creates, transforms, or renews the world — appears across virtuall

trickster culture hero boundary crosser Loki Coyote Anansi