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.
2,331 results for "Type Ia supernova" — page 59 of 117
C_5_11 — Slavic Mythology — Perun, Veles, and the World Tree
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_5_03 — Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Indigenous knowledge systems represent the longest-running experiments in human survival — the Australian Aboriginal peoples have maintained continuous cultural practice for 65,000+ years, making theirs the oldest living
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_5_20 — Seasonal Ritual Cycles: Solstice, Equinox, and Agricultural Festivals
Seasonal ritual cycles — religious festivals, agricultural ceremonies, and sacred observances tied to the solstices, equinoxes, and the transitional points between them — represent humanity's oldest continuous relationsh
C_5_02 — Cargo Cult Analogy for Ancient Contact
Cargo cults — millenarian movements where pre-industrial societies interpret advanced technology through religious frameworks — provide a documented, Tier 1 analogy for how ancient contact narratives may have formed. WWI
C_5_18 — Sami Nordic Shamanic Traditions
The Sami (historically "Lapp," now considered pejorative) are the indigenous people of Sápmi, spanning northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Kola Peninsula of Russia. Their shamanic tradition, centered on the noaidi
C_3_03 — Sacred Kingship and Divine Rulership
Almost every civilization in recorded history has believed that their rulers held power through a divine connection. This is not mere propaganda — it is one of the most universal patterns in human culture, emerging indep
C_3_01 — Global Flood Stories
Over 500 independent flood traditions exist worldwide, spanning Mesopotamian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Greek, Aboriginal, Mesoamerican, and dozens of other cultures. The oldest written accounts — the Sumerian Eridu Gene
C_3_13 — Oracle Traditions — Cross-Cultural Divination Systems
Oracular divination — the practice of seeking knowledge of the unknown or future through systematic ritual procedures — appears in virtually every known civilization, from Mesopotamian extispicy (reading animal entrails,
C_3_05 — Aztec Cosmology and the Five Suns
Aztec (Mexica) cosmology describes the universe as having passed through four previous ages (Suns), each created and destroyed by different gods through catastrophic events — jaguars, wind, fire-rain, and flood. We live
C_3_12 — Numerology — Sacred Number Systems Across Cultures
The conviction that numbers possess intrinsic sacred, cosmological, or metaphysical significance — and that the structure of reality is fundamentally mathematical — appears in virtually every literate civilization and ma
C_3_11 — Sacred Sexuality, Hieros Gamos, and Fertility Cults
Sacred sexuality — the ritual enactment of sexual union as a cosmologically generative act — represents one of the most widespread and most misunderstood categories of ancient religious practice. The Sumerian hieros gamo
C_3_09 — Sacred Pilgrimage Traditions Worldwide
Pilgrimage — the intentional journey to a sacred site for spiritual transformation — is one of the most universal religious practices in human history, documented across virtually every major world tradition and many Ind
C_3_08 — Death Rituals, Funerary Architecture, and the Technology of Dying
How a culture treats its dead reveals its deepest beliefs about what a human being is and what (if anything) lies beyond death. From the earliest known intentional burial (~100,000 BCE, Qafzeh Cave, Israel — ochre-staine
C_3_06 — Alchemy — Transmutation Across Cultures
Alchemy — from Arabic al-kīmiyā (possibly from Egyptian kmt, "black land," or Greek chymeia, "pouring/mixing") — is arguably the most misunderstood tradition in intellectual history. Dismissed by modern science as mere p
C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro
C_2_08 — Venus / Morning Star Traditions
Venus, the brightest object in the sky after the Sun and Moon, plays a central role in myths across every major civilization. The Sumerians identified Inanna as the planet Venus, whose descent to and return from the unde
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_03 — Viracocha & South American Knowledge-Givers
Across the ancient Americas — from the Andes to Mesoamerica to the Colombian highlands and Brazilian coasts — a recurring figure appears: a bearded, non-local teacher who arrives from afar, brings the foundations of civi
C_2_09 — Dogon / Nommo Comprehensive
This document examines Dogon / Nommo Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Geography and Demographics, Marcel Griaule and the Ethnographic Record, Ogotemmêl
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields