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288 results for "land bridge" — page 5 of 15
A_1_03 — The Apkallu & Oannes: The Seven Sages Who Taught Civilization
This document examines The Apkallu & Oannes: The Seven Sages Who Taught Civilization, a topic within the Foundations research area. Notable findings include: Berossus** (Βηρωσσός) — Babylonian priest of Bel (Marduk), ~28
A_4_31 — Amazonian Indigenous Cosmologies: Tupi, Guarani & Their World
The Tupi-Guarani language family encompasses hundreds of indigenous peoples across a vast territory stretching from the Amazon Basin through eastern Brazil to the Río de la Plata region of Paraguay, Argentina, and Urugua
A_4_04 — The Kojiki: Japan's Record of Ancient Matters
The Kojiki ("Record of Ancient Matters"), completed in 712 CE, is the oldest surviving literary work in Japan and the primary source for Shinto mythology and the divine origin of the Japanese imperial line. Compiled by Ō
A_4_17 — Aboriginal Australian Dreaming Narratives
The Dreaming (known by various language-specific names — Jukurrpa in Warlpiri, Tjukurpa in Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara, Wongar in Yolngu) is the central cosmological, legal, and ontological framework of Aboriginal Aus
A_4_09 — Avestan Texts — Gathas, Vendidad, and Yasna
The Avesta is the primary scripture of Zoroastrianism, the religion founded by the prophet Zarathushtra (Greek: Zoroaster) in ancient Iran. The surviving Avesta — a fraction of a much larger corpus reportedly destroyed d
U_1_23 — Aboriginal Songlines
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks, song cycles, or *yiri in some Aboriginal languages) are an ancient system of oral navigation, cultural law, and cosmological knowledge used by Aboriginal Australian peoples — repre
U_5_14 — Indigenous Australian Art: Dot Painting, Bark Art, and Songlines
Indigenous Australian art constitutes the world's longest continuous artistic tradition — spanning at least 65,000 years from the earliest rock art and engravings to contemporary paintings that sell for six-figure sums i
U_2_04 — Sculpture from Venus Figurines to Monumental Art
Sculpture — the shaping of three-dimensional form — represents one of humanity's oldest artistic expressions, from the Venus of Willendorf (c. 30,000 BP, Austria) to the monumental Moai of Rapa Nui (Easter Island, c. 125
X_5_26 — Psychedelic Medicine: The Johns Hopkins Center and the Therapeutic Renaissance
The psychedelic therapy renaissance — centered at the Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research (established 2019, originally launched as a research program in 2000) — represents one of the most sig
W_4_01 — Maya Epigraphy, Astronomy, and Calendar Science
The Maya civilization developed one of the most sophisticated writing systems in the pre-Columbian Americas — a mixed logographic-syllabic script that recorded history, astronomy, mythology, and ritual on stone monuments
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_4_06 — Dreamtime Songlines and Aboriginal Navigation
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks or song paths) are one of humanity's most extraordinary intellectual achievements — a vast network of songs that simultaneously encode mythological narrative, geographic navigation
W_1_01 — Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism
The Olmec civilization (~1500–400 BCE), centered in the tropical lowlands of Mexico's Gulf Coast (modern Veracruz and Tabasco), is widely considered the "mother culture" of Mesoamerica — the civilization from which later
W_3_12 — Gupta Empire: Classical India's Golden Age
The Gupta Empire (c. 320–550 CE) is widely regarded as the "Golden Age" of classical India — a period of extraordinary achievement in literature, science, mathematics, philosophy, art, and architecture that set the cultu
W_3_04 — Swahili Coast — Maritime Trade, City-States, and Cultural Exchange
The Swahili Coast — stretching over 2,000 miles from Mogadishu to Mozambique — was home to a network of prosperous maritime city-states that flourished from the 8th through 16th centuries CE, serving as the western ancho
W_2_09 — Ainu Mythology and Bear Ceremonialism
The Ainu are the Indigenous people of Hokkaido (northern Japan), Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, whose cosmological system centers on the concept of kamuy — divine spirits that inhabit all natural phenomena and voluntar
W_2_28 — Gupta Empire: Classical India's Golden Age
The Gupta Empire (c. 320–550 CE) is widely regarded as the "Golden Age" of classical India — a period of extraordinary achievement in literature, science, mathematics, philosophy, art, and architecture that set the cultu
W_2_03 — Daoism and Chinese Alchemy
Daoism is one of the world's oldest continuous philosophical-religious traditions, originating in China by at least the 4th century BCE and likely much earlier. Its alchemical tradition encompasses both waidan (external
W_5_07 — Sami Shamanism and Circumpolar Traditions
The circumpolar world — the vast band of Arctic and subarctic territory stretching from Scandinavia across Siberia to Alaska, Canada, and Greenland — is home to indigenous peoples whose spiritual traditions represent som
W_5_05 — Southeast Asian Spirit Traditions (Thai, Burmese, Khmer)
Southeast Asia presents one of the world's most complex religious landscapes, where Theravada Buddhism has been practiced for over a millennium in deep synthesis with pre-Buddhist animistic traditions rather than displac
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