RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,691 results for "de natura deorum" — page 19 of 135
F_2_14 — Ancient Glass Bead Trade: From Mesopotamia to Sub-Saharan Africa
Glass beads are among the most archaeologically informative objects in the ancient world — small, durable, widely traded, and chemically distinctive — making them exceptional tracers of long-distance exchange networks sp
F_2_10 — Jade Trade Networks — Mesoamerica, China, and New Zealand
Jade — a term covering two distinct minerals, nephrite (calcium-magnesium silicate, $\text{Ca}_2(\text{Mg,Fe})_5\text{Si}_8\text{O}_{22}(\text{OH})_2$) and jadeite (sodium-aluminum silicate, $\text{NaAlSi}_2\text{O}_6$)
F_2_08 — Lapis Lazuli Trade Networks
Lapis lazuli — a deep-blue metamorphic rock composed primarily of lazurite — is one of the oldest traded luxury materials in human history, with its distribution across the ancient world providing direct evidence of long
F_2_22 — Ancient Pigment Trade Routes: Lapis Lazuli, Tyrian Purple & Cinnabar
Pigments were among the most valued trade goods of the ancient world, with some traversing distances exceeding 4,000 km from source to final use. Lapis lazuli from the Sar-i Sang mines in Badakhshan (northeastern Afghani
F_2_18 — Ancient Trade in Aromatics: Frankincense, Myrrh, and Sacred Resins
Frankincense (Boswellia sacra and related species) and myrrh (Commiphora myrrha) — aromatic tree resins harvested from the arid landscapes of southern Arabia (Oman's Dhofar region, Yemen's Hadramawt) and the Horn of Afri
F_2_13 — Copper Trade Networks: Great Lakes to Mediterranean
The Great Lakes copper deposits — particularly the vast deposits of native (naturally pure) copper on the Keweenaw Peninsula and Isle Royale of Michigan's Upper Peninsula — represent one of the world's most remarkable mi
F_4_19 — Denisovan Legacy in Island Southeast Asia and Melanesia
The Denisovans — an archaic hominin group identified in 2010 from ~41,000-year-old fossils found in Denisova Cave (Altai Mountains, Siberia) — left a striking and disproportionate genetic legacy in the populations of Isl
F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity
Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,
F_4_32 — Obsidian Trade Networks: Volcanic Glass and Long-Distance Exchange
Obsidian — volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly — was one of the most important raw materials in human prehistory, prized for its ability to produce the sharpest cutting edges known (fracture to edges of
F_4_30 — Salt: History, Preservation, and Global Trade Networks
Salt (sodium chloride) is arguably the most important mineral in human civilization — essential for life, critical for food preservation before refrigeration, and a driver of trade routes, taxation, and conflict across m
F_4_16 — Lost Languages and Undeciphered Scripts
Dozens of ancient and medieval scripts remain partially or wholly undeciphered, representing lost linguistic traditions whose content may hold key information about ancient cultures, trade networks, religion, and technol
F_3_05 — Writing System Origins and Independent Inventions
Writing was independently invented at least four times in human history: Sumerian cuneiform in Mesopotamia (~3400 BCE), Egyptian hieroglyphs (~3200 BCE), Chinese script (~1200 BCE with possible earlier precursors), and M
F_3_10 — Plague and Disease Transmission Along Trade Routes
The same trade routes and migration corridors that connected distant civilizations also served as highways for pandemic disease, making pathogen transmission one of the most consequential — and devastating — forms of "lo
F_3_17 — Megalithic Diffusion Debate: Atlantic Façade Connections
The megalithic diffusion debate is one of archaeology's longest-running controversies: did the remarkable concentrations of megalithic monuments (dolmens, passage tombs, standing stones, stone circles, alignments, and ch
ZA_5_09 — Quantum Simulation: Programming Nature to Model Nature
Quantum simulation — using one controllable quantum system to emulate the behavior of another, less tractable quantum system — was proposed by Richard Feynman in 1982 as a natural solution to the fundamental difficulty o
ZA_4_15 — Condensed Matter Physics: Emergent Phenomena in Many-Body Systems
Condensed matter physics — the largest subfield of physics by number of active researchers — studies the collective behavior of vast numbers of interacting particles (electrons, atoms, ions, spins) in solid, liquid, and
ZA_4_24 — Bose-Einstein Condensates
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter in which a dilute gas of bosons is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero (~100 nanokelvin), causing a macroscopic fraction of the particles to occupy the lowest q
ZA_4_16 — Semiconductor Physics: Band Theory, Transistors, and Modern Electronics
Semiconductor physics — the study of materials with electrical conductivity between that of conductors and insulators — underpins virtually all modern electronic technology. The development of band theory by Felix Bloch
ZA_4_12 — Bose-Einstein Condensates and Ultracold Atoms
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter formed when a dilute gas of bosons (particles with integer spin) is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero (~nanokelvin), causing a macroscopic fraction of the ato
ZA_3_13 — Higgs Boson: The Origin of Mass and the Standard Model's Final Piece
The Higgs boson — discovered on July 4, 2012, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) — is the quantum excitation of the Higgs field, a scalar field that permeates all of space and gives ma
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields