RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,310 results for "Street of the Dead" — page 28 of 116
T_3_17 — Synesthesia
Synesthesia (from Greek syn- "together" + aisthēsis "sensation") is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers involuntary experiences in a second pathway — p
T_3_19 — Feral Children, Linguistic Deprivation, and Critical Period Evidence
Feral children — individuals who grew up with minimal or no human contact during their early years — provide the most compelling (and tragic) natural evidence for the critical period hypothesis in language acquisition. T
T_5_03 — Embodied and Social Cognition
Embodied cognition challenges the classical computational model of mind (cognition as abstract symbol manipulation, independent of the body) by proposing that cognitive processes are fundamentally shaped by the body's ph
T_5_19 — Empathy: Neuroscience, Mirror Neurons & Moral Development
Empathy — the capacity to share, understand, and respond to others' emotional and cognitive states — is a multi-component phenomenon with deep evolutionary roots, distinct neural substrates, and profound implications for
D_2_17 — Library of Alexandria: Knowledge, Destruction, and Legacy
The Library of Alexandria (Greek: Bibliothēkē tēs Alexandreias) was the ancient world's most famous center of learning, established in Alexandria, Egypt, during the early Ptolemaic dynasty — most likely under Ptolemy I S
D_2_07 — Persepolis: Achaemenid Architecture, Apadana Reliefs, and Imperial Ideology
Persepolis (Old Persian: Pārsa; modern Takht-e Jamshid, Fars Province, Iran) was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, constructed primarily under Darius I (r. 522–486 BCE) and his son Xerxes I (r. 486
D_2_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
D_2_09 — Tell el-Amarna: Akhenaten's Capital and the Solar Revolution
Tell el-Amarna, located in Middle Egypt on the east bank of the Nile, is the archaeological site of Akhetaten ("Horizon of the Aten"), the short-lived capital city founded by Pharaoh Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV, r. ~1353–133
D_2_19 — Bronze Age Southeast Asia: Ban Chiang, Dong Son & the Metal Age Transition
Southeast Asia developed a distinctive Bronze Age tradition beginning c. 2000 BCE that challenges diffusionist models of metallurgical transmission from the Near East. The Ban Chiang site in northeastern Thailand, excava
D_1_08 — Tiwanaku and Puma Punku Deep Dive
Tiwanaku, situated at 3,825m elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano near the shores of Lake Titicaca, was the highest-altitude imperial capital in the ancient world. Flourishing from approximately 300 to 1000 CE, its influe
D_1_03 — Megalithic Impossible Engineering
Ancient megalithic construction worldwide features stone blocks of extraordinary size and precision that challenge conventional explanations. Baalbek's Trilithon uses three 800-tonne stones set 7 meters above ground; Sac
D_5_12 — Masks, Ritual Objects, and Power Artifacts
Ritual objects — masks, amulets, relics, bundles, sacred vessels — are among humanity's most ancient artifacts and serve as interfaces between the human and spiritual worlds. Masks appear in the archaeological record fro
D_3_13 — Aksum Stelae: Ethiopian Monumental Engineering
Aksum (also Axum) — a city in the northern Ethiopian highlands (Tigray Region) — was the capital of the Aksumite Kingdom (c. 1st–7th centuries CE), one of the most powerful and sophisticated states of the ancient world,
D_3_05 — Lalibela Rock-Hewn Churches — Ethiopia's New Jerusalem
The rock-hewn churches of Lalibela in northern Ethiopia constitute one of the most extraordinary architectural achievements in sub-Saharan Africa and the Christian world. Located in the Lasta region of the Ethiopian High
B_5_01 — Animal Symbolism Beyond Serpents — Eagle, Jaguar, Bull, Fish
While serpent symbolism dominates this project's B-section (→ [B_2_01](../B2_Humanoid_Crypto_Entities/B_2_01_Reptilian_Beings_Overview.md)–B_3_02), four other animals appear with extraordinary consistency across unrelate
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_2_14 — Undead and Revenant Traditions Beyond Vampires
The revenant — a corpse that returns from death to interact with the living — is one of the most ancient and widespread categories in world folklore, distinct from (though overlapping with) the vampire tradition treated
B_2_21 — Unicorn: Horse-Horn Mythology and Cultural Persistence
The unicorn — a single-horned equine creature of extraordinary beauty and power — is one of the most enduring mythological figures in world culture, with a documented textual tradition spanning at least 2,400 years and p
B_1_24 — Earth Mother: Gaia, Pachamama, and the Mother Goddess Archetype
The Earth Mother — a divine feminine figure personifying the earth itself as a life-giving, nurturing, and sometimes devouring entity — is among the most ancient and widespread religious concepts in human history. In Gre
B_1_11 — Fertility Deities and Earth Mothers: Demeter, Freya, Pachamama
Fertility deities and earth mothers — divine figures governing agricultural abundance, human reproduction, and the regenerative cycles of the earth — constitute one of the earliest and most enduring theological categorie
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields