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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.
2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 62 of 135
ZH_4_03 — Star Myths and Constellation Stories Across Cultures
Every human culture that has observed the night sky has organized the visible stars into patterns — constellations, asterisms, and star groups — and woven them into narrative frameworks that encode cosmological beliefs,
ZH_4_06 — Comets and Meteors in Cultural History: Omens to Science
Throughout human history, comets — with their dramatic, unpredictable appearances and luminous tails stretching across the sky — have been among the most powerful celestial omens, inspiring fear, wonder, and interpretive
ZH_4_11 — Astronomical Mythology: Why Stars Were Named and Storied
Every known human culture has projected stories, characters, and meaning onto the stars — transforming patterns of light into mythological landscapes inhabited by gods, heroes, animals, and cosmic forces. Astronomical my
ZH_3_02 — Polynesian Celestial Navigation: Star Compass and Wayfinding
The peoples of Polynesia — spread across the vast Polynesian Triangle (Hawaiʻi, Rapa Nui/Easter Island, Aotearoa/New Zealand), the largest ocean-spanning cultural region on Earth — accomplished the most remarkable feat o
ZH_3_16 — Polynesian Star Compass: Celestial Navigation of the Pacific
The Polynesian star compass represents one of humanity's most sophisticated non-instrument navigation systems — enabling deliberate, repeatable voyages across thousands of miles of open Pacific Ocean centuries before Eur
ZH_3_17 — Amazonian Astronomical Traditions
Amazonian indigenous astronomical traditions represent some of the least-documented but most sophisticated non-Western star knowledge systems, integrating stellar observation with ecological management, seasonal agricult
ZH_3_05 — Nazca Lines: Astronomical and Ecological Hypotheses
The Nazca Lines are a vast complex of geoglyphs — ground drawings created by removing the dark, iron-oxide-coated desert pavement to reveal the lighter ground beneath — spread across the arid Pampa de Nazca and surroundi
ZH_3_23 — Maya Venus Observations
The ancient Maya developed the most precise pre-telescopic observations of Venus in the world, culminating in the Venus Table (pages 24 and 46–50) of the Dresden Codex — a Late Postclassic manuscript (~13th–14th century
ZH_3_11 — Arctic and Subarctic Astronomy: Inuit, Sámi, Siberian
The astronomy of Arctic and subarctic peoples — including the Inuit (across Canada, Alaska, and Greenland), Sámi (Fennoscandia), and Siberian cultures (Chukchi, Evenki, Yakut, and others) — represents adaptation to one o
ZH_3_22 — Medicine Wheel Astronomy
Medicine wheels are large stone structures found across the northern Great Plains and Rocky Mountain front ranges of North America, from Wyoming and Montana to Saskatchewan and Alberta, consisting of central cairns with
ZH_3_01 — Maya Astronomical Science: Venus Tables, Eclipse Cycles
The ancient Maya (c. 2000 BCE–1500 CE, with the Classic period c. 250–900 CE) developed one of the most sophisticated astronomical traditions of the pre-modern world — rivaling and in some respects exceeding Babylonian m
ZH_3_15 — Norse Astronomy: Sunstones, Aurvandil's Toe, and Viking Celestial Navigation
The Norse/Viking world (c. 800–1100 CE) developed a distinctive astronomical culture shaped by extreme northern latitudes — long summer days with no true darkness, short winter days with extended night, the aurora boreal
ZH_3_14 — Nighttime Navigation Without Instruments: Stars, Moon, and Memory
For most of human history, navigators crossing deserts, oceans, and arctic wastes found their way using the stars, the Moon, the Sun's position, and memory — without magnetic compasses, chronometers, or sextants. Non-ins
ZH_5_17 — Ancient Variable Star Observations (Algol)
Algol (Beta Persei, the "Demon Star") — a second-magnitude eclipsing binary star in the constellation Perseus that dims dramatically every 2.867 days as its fainter companion transits the primary star — may have been rec
ZH_5_21 — Precession of the Equinoxes: The Great Year and Ancient Awareness
The precession of the equinoxes — the slow westward drift of the vernal equinox point along the ecliptic, completing a full cycle in approximately 25,772 years (the "Great Year" or "Platonic Year") — is the longest astro
ZH_5_06 — Horizon Astronomy: Skyline Observations, Foresights, and Horizonal Calendars
Horizon astronomy — the practice of observing where celestial bodies rise and set along the natural skyline — is the most ancient, most widespread, and most practical form of astronomical observation. Unlike meridian tra
ZH_5_07 — Light and Shadow Hierophanies: Temple Sun Daggers and Solar Inserts
A hierophany — a manifestation of the sacred — is realized in some of the world's most famous ancient structures through the precise interplay of light and shadow. On specific calendar dates — typically solstices, equino
ZH_5_16 — Eclipse Prediction and the Saros Cycle
The Saros cycle — a period of approximately 6,585.3 days (18 years, 11 days, 8 hours) after which the Sun, Moon, and lunar nodes return to nearly identical relative positions — has been the primary tool for eclipse predi
ZH_5_01 — Medieval European Astronomy: Monasteries to Universities
Medieval European astronomy (roughly 500–1500 CE) is often dismissed as a "dark age" of astronomical ignorance — sandwiched between Greek–Roman achievement and the Copernican revolution. This view is profoundly misleadin
ZH_5_02 — Megalithic Lunar Observatories: Thom's Hypothesis Revisited
The hypothesis that Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monuments in Britain, Ireland, and Brittany functioned as sophisticated lunar observatories — capable of tracking the Moon's complex motions to high precision — is
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