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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
459 results for "cultural adaptation" — page 23 of 23
H_3_09 — Suppression of Matriarchal Evidence and Goddess Cultures
The question of whether matriarchal or goddess-centered societies existed in prehistory — and whether evidence for them has been systematically suppressed or marginalized — is one of the most contentious intersections of
H_4_21 — Censorship of Ancient Art: What We Weren't Shown
The censorship of ancient art that depicts sexuality, nudity, sacred eroticism, violence, bodily functions, or other content considered offensive or inappropriate by later sensibilities represents a significant and well-
P_4_18 — African Philosophy: Ubuntu, Sage Tradition, and Ethnophilosophy
African philosophy encompasses a diverse set of intellectual traditions — from pre-colonial oral philosophical systems preserved through proverbs, cosmologies, and sage discourse, through the anti-colonial movements of N
N_5_16 — Kiva: Sacred Architecture of Pueblo Initiation and Knowledge Transmission
The kiva is a semi-subterranean ceremonial chamber characteristic of Ancestral Puebloan and modern Pueblo cultures of the U.S. Southwest, used for initiation, ritual, governance of religious societies, and intergeneratio
F_1_15 — Norse-Islamic Contact: Vikings and the Caliphate
The contact between Norse (Viking) Scandinavia and the Islamic world — particularly the Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258 CE) — constitutes one of the most remarkable and underappreciated long-distance exchange networks of the
F_2_11 — Ancient Spice and Incense Routes: Aromatic Trade Networks
The trade in aromatic substances — frankincense, myrrh, cinnamon, cassia, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, camphor, sandalwood, spikenard, and dozens of other plant-derived resins, barks, seeds, and oils — constitutes one of the
F_2_09 — Currency and Coinage Diffusion
The invention of standardized currency and coinage transformed human economic interaction and represents one of the great innovations in the history of exchange. Remarkably, coinage appears to have been independently inv
F_4_28 — Austronesian Expansion & Polynesian Navigation
The Austronesian expansion is the greatest maritime migration in human history — spanning from Taiwan (c. 3000 BCE) across Island Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and into the vast Pacific, ultimately reaching Madagascar (west
F_4_31 — Lapita Culture: Origins of Pacific Colonization
The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1500–500 BCE) represents the archaeological signature of the first human colonization of Remote Oceania — the islands beyond the Solomon chain that had never been inhabited by any hominid.
F_4_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
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_3_16 — Ancient Astronomical Knowledge Transfer: East to West
The transfer of astronomical knowledge from East to West — from Mesopotamian/Babylonian, Egyptian, Indian, and Persian traditions through Greek, Hellenistic, and Islamic intermediaries to medieval and Renaissance Europe
F_3_07 — Independent Origins of Plant Domestication
Plant domestication — the process by which wild species are genetically and morphologically transformed through human selection into cultivable, human-dependent crops — arose independently in at least 7–11 geographically
F_3_20 — Pottery Diffusion Patterns: Ceramic Technology Transfer Across Ancient Civilizations
Pottery — humanity's first synthetic material, created by irreversibly transforming clay through firing at 500–1,200°C — serves as the single most abundant and informative artifact class in archaeology, providing evidenc
F_0_00 — Lost Connections: Section Summary
I_5_17 — UAP and Consciousness: The Intersection
A persistent, under-discussed feature of serious UAP research is that the most intense witness reports — close-encounter cases, repeated-percipient cases, and the "contact phenomenon" — show high correlation with altered
I_5_16 — Indigenous UAP Knowledge and Traditional Sky Lore
Indigenous cultures worldwide preserve traditions describing luminous objects in the sky, beings descending from above, and ancestral connections to celestial origins. The Hopi "Ant People" (Anu Sinom) who sheltered huma
V_1_19 — Non-Western Mathematical Traditions
The standard Eurocentric narrative of mathematics — from Greek geometry to the European Scientific Revolution — obscures the fact that many foundational mathematical innovations originated in India, China, the Islamic wo
V_1_18 — Ethnomathematics: Mathematics Across Cultures
Ethnomathematics — the study of mathematical ideas, methods, and practices developed by cultural groups outside the Western academic tradition — was formalized as a field by Ubiratan D'Ambrosio (Brazil, 1985), who argued
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