RESEARCH BASE
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.
112 results for "animal deity" — page 2 of 6
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_01 — Animal Cognition — Corvids, Cetaceans, Cephalopods, and Non-Human Minds
The study of animal cognition has undergone a revolution over the past three decades, dismantling the long-held assumption that complex thought is uniquely human. The 2012 Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness formally
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
ZB_1_10 — Sound Communication and Animal Vocalization
Sound communication is one of the most versatile and widespread signaling modalities in the animal kingdom, spanning frequencies from infrasound (elephants: ~14 Hz, traveling kilometers through air and ground) to ultraso
ZB_5_23 — Bioacoustics & Animal Communication
Bioacoustics — the study of biological sound production, transmission, and reception — reveals a hidden world of communication systems of extraordinary sophistication. Humpback whale songs contain hierarchical structure
G_2_10 — Zooarchaeology — Animal Bones as Cultural Evidence
Zooarchaeology (also called archaeozoology) is the study of animal remains — primarily bones, teeth, antler, horn, and shell — recovered from archaeological sites, to reconstruct past human-animal relationships, includin
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_23 — Divine Twins: Dual Deity Motif in World Mythology
The divine twins motif — paired deities or heroes, usually brothers, who complement or oppose each other — is one of the most widespread mythological archetypes on Earth. The pattern appears in Indo-European, Mesoamerica
B_1_04 — Ningishzida — Serpent Deity, Underworld Guardian, and Knowledge Bearer
Ningishzida (Sumerian: dNin-ĝiš-zid-da, "Lord of the Good Tree" or "Lord of the Faithful Tree") is a Mesopotamian deity associated with serpents, the underworld, vegetation, and secret knowledge. He appears in Sumerian t
S_2_09 — Cellular Agriculture: Lab-Grown Meat, Fermentation, and Post-Animal Food
Cellular agriculture — the production of animal products (meat, dairy, leather, eggs) directly from cell cultures rather than from whole animals — represents a potentially transformative approach to global food productio
C_5_29 — Moon Mythology: Lunar Deities, Cycles, and Symbolism Across Cultures
The Moon — the most visible and regularly changing celestial object — has been a primary religious and mythological symbol for every known culture. Its predictable cycle of waxing, full, waning, and new (approximately 29
ZF_2_03 — Marine Migration Patterns and Cetacean Intelligence
Marine animals execute some of the most extraordinary navigational feats in biology — humpback whales migrating 8,000+ km between polar feeding grounds and tropical breeding waters, sea turtles returning to their natal b
ZB_4_03 — Desert Biology and Xerophytes
Deserts — regions receiving <250 mm of annual precipitation — cover ~33% of Earth's land surface and harbor organisms with some of the most remarkable adaptations in biology. Desert organisms face extreme challenges: wat
B_4_19 — Smithing & Craft Deities: Divine Artisans Across Cultures
Smithing and craft deities represent one of the most consistent divine archetypes across cultures, reflecting the deep association between metallurgical skill and supernatural power in premodern societies. From Hephaestu
B_2_19 — Smithing and Craft Deities: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Smithing and craft deities occupy a distinctive mythological position across cultures: they are simultaneously among the most revered and most marginalized divine figures. Hephaestus (Greek), Vulcan (Roman), Ptah (Egypti
B_1_19 — Love and Beauty Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
Deities governing love, beauty, fertility, and sexuality appear across virtually every documented religious tradition, often combining erotic power with martial or funerary functions that modern Western categories would
B_1_20 — Trickster Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparison
The trickster is among the most widespread deity archetypes in world mythology, appearing independently across every inhabited continent. Characterized by cunning, boundary-crossing, shapeshifting, and the subversion of
L_2_10 — Human–Dog Co-Evolution: 40,000 Years Together
The domestication of the dog (Canis lupus familiaris) from gray wolves (Canis lupus) represents the oldest known domestication event and one of the most consequential interspecies relationships in human history — predati
ZE_3_07 — Ethics of Consciousness and Sentience
The ethics of consciousness and sentience investigates the moral implications of phenomenal experience — what moral obligations arise from the fact that some entities can feel, suffer, and have subjective experiences? Th
M_1_16 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar & Enclosure Analysis
Göbekli Tepe — the monumental Neolithic ritual complex located on a limestone ridge ~15 km northeast of Şanlıurfa in southeastern Turkey (coordinates: 37°13′23″N, 38°55′21″E) — contains the oldest known monumental stone
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