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245 results for "galactic mythology" — page 5 of 13
C_5_27 — Labyrinth Mythology: From Knossos to Sacred Geometry
The labyrinth — a unicursal or multicursal path winding toward a center — is one of the most ancient and globally distributed symbols. The most famous is the Labyrinth of Knossos (Crete), traditionally built by Daedalus
C_5_08 — Armenian Mythology and the Urartian Connection
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
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
C_5_34 — Greek Religion: Gods, Ritual, and the Sacred in Ancient Greece
Greek religion was not a unified creed but a diverse ecology of practices, beliefs, and institutions that varied by polis, period, and social context. At its core was polytheistic ritual practice — animal sacrifice, liba
C_0_00 — Mythology & Cross-Cultural: Section Summary
C_2_06 — Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier)
This document examines Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier), a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Dragon as water/weather regulator, Dragon as
C_2_16 — Mesoamerican Mythology Beyond Maya and Aztec
Mesoamerican mythology is overwhelmingly studied through the lens of the Maya and Aztec/Mexica — the two civilizations with the most extensive surviving textual and iconographic records. Yet Mesoamerica was a mosaic of d
C_2_10 — Basque Language, Culture, and Serpent Mythology
This document examines Basque Language, Culture, and Serpent Mythology, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Euskara — Europe's Last Language Isolate, Linguistic Features
ZF_3_15 — Tsunami Cultural Memory: Indigenous Oral Records and Ancient Warnings
Tsunami cultural memory reveals that indigenous and traditional communities have preserved remarkably accurate records of catastrophic ocean events — sometimes for centuries or millennia — through oral traditions, storie
ZF_3_03 — Ocean Mythology: Sea Serpents, Leviathan, Dragon Kings, and Primordial Waters
Every maritime civilization has produced a rich mythology of the sea — and a striking cross-cultural pattern emerges: serpentine or draconic beings are the most universal ocean guardians and deities. From the Sumerian En
ZG_5_19 — Marija Gimbutas: Old Europe, Goddess Archaeology, and the Kurgan Hypothesis
Marija Gimbutas (1921–1994) was a Lithuanian-American archaeologist whose "Kurgan hypothesis" and "Old Europe" thesis fundamentally reshaped Indo-European studies and Neolithic archaeology. Working at UCLA from 1963 unti
Q_1_20 — Fractal Cosmology: Is the Universe Self-Similar Across Scales?
The observable universe organises matter into a staggering fractal-like web of galaxy filaments, walls, voids, and clusters — structures visible at scales from 1 Mpc (galaxy groups) to 600 Mpc (the Hercules-Corona Boreal
Q_4_01 — Primordial Gravitational Waves and B-Mode Polarization
Primordial gravitational waves — ripples in spacetime generated during cosmic inflation — represent one of the most sought-after signals in cosmology. Their detection would provide direct evidence that inflation occurred
Q_2_11 — Stellar Populations, Metallicity, and Generations
Stars preserve the chemical fingerprint of the gas from which they formed, making them archaeological records of the universe's chemical history. Walter Baade (1944) recognized two distinct stellar populations: Populatio
Q_2_03 — Cosmic Rays and High-Energy Astrophysics
Cosmic rays — high-energy particles from space, mostly protons and atomic nuclei — were discovered by Victor Hess in 1912 via balloon flights that measured ionization increasing with altitude, earning him the Nobel Prize
Q_2_05 — Galaxy Formation, Structure, and Classification
Galaxies — gravitationally bound systems of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter — are the fundamental building blocks of the universe's large-scale structure. From Edwin Hubble's morphological classification (1926) to mode
Q_3_11 — Cosmic Reionization and First Stars
The Epoch of Reionization (EoR) refers to the period in cosmic history (~150 million to ~1 billion years after the Big Bang, redshifts z ≈ 15–6) when the first luminous sources — Population III (Pop III) stars, early gal
INTERDOC_42 — The Serpent Being: Humanity's Oldest and Most Inverted Mythology
[KEY FINDING] Before the rise of Indo-European and Abrahamic traditions, serpent beings were the most widely venerated entity category on Earth:
G_2_05 — Graph Theory and Knowledge Network Analysis
Graph theory — the mathematical study of networks of nodes (vertices) connected by edges (links) — provides a rigorous framework for analyzing the structure of connections in systems ranging from ancient social hierarchi
O_2_01 — Volcanism, Supervolcanoes, and Geological Catastrophism
Volcanic eruptions are among the most powerful forces on Earth, capable of altering global climate, triggering mass extinctions, collapsing civilizations, and imprinting themselves on human mythology for millennia. The T
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