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.
191 results for "linguistic atlas" — page 7 of 10
ZG_1_12 — Ogham, Runic, and Northern European Writing Systems
The Ogham and Runic scripts are two distinctive writing systems that developed in the northern and western peripheries of Europe, each serving as a medium for monumental inscriptions, personal names, territorial claims,
ZG_1_05 — History of Decipherment — Champollion, Ventris, Kober
The decipherment of ancient scripts ranks among the greatest intellectual achievements of the modern era — systematically recovering the ability to read languages that had been silent for centuries or millennia. The disc
ZG_1_13 — Musical Notation — From Hurrian Hymn to Modern Score
Musical notation — the visual representation of music through written symbols — is a form of language translation that encodes temporal, pitch, rhythmic, and expressive information into a spatial format readable across c
ZG_1_14 — Mesoamerican Writing Systems: Zapotec, Mixtec, and Aztec Codices
Beyond the celebrated Maya script (the only fully developed logosyllabic writing system in the pre-Columbian Americas), Mesoamerica produced a remarkable diversity of writing and recording systems that ranged from the ea
ZG_1_19 — History of Decipherment
The history of decipherment — the recovery of lost writing systems and languages — represents some of the greatest intellectual achievements in the humanities, revealing entire civilizations whose written records had bee
ZG_1_01 — Origin of Language — When Did Humans First Speak?
The origin of human language — the capacity for open-ended, recursive, symbolic communication — remains one of the most debated questions in science, lying at the intersection of linguistics, paleoanthropology, genetics,
ZG_1_15 — African Writing Systems: Bamum, Vai, N'Ko, Ge'ez, and Nsibidi
Africa has produced a remarkable diversity of indigenous writing systems spanning millennia — from the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics (c. 3200 BCE) and Meroitic script (c. 300 BCE, Kingdom of Kush) to scores of modern sc
ZG_1_04 — Chinese Characters — Logographic Writing Across Millennia
Chinese characters (hànzì, 汉字) constitute the world's longest continuously used writing system, attested from the Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions (~1250 BCE) to the present day — a span of over 3,200 years with no
ZG_1_09 — Writing Materials — Clay, Papyrus, Parchment, Paper
The history of writing materials is the material history of human knowledge itself — the physical substrates on which civilizations recorded thought, law, literature, science, and commerce determined what could be writte
ZG_1_08 — Phoenician Alphabet — The Revolution from Consonants to Letters
The Phoenician alphabet — a 22-letter consonantal ("abjad") script developed by Phoenician-speaking Canaanites along the Levantine coast by ~1050 BCE — is arguably the single most consequential writing innovation in huma
ZG_1_02 — Cuneiform — The World's First Writing System
Cuneiform — from Latin cuneus ("wedge") — is the earliest known writing system, invented in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) by the Sumerians circa 3400–3100 BCE in the city of Uruk. It began as a system of pictographi
ZG_1_11 — Arabic Script — Calligraphy, Typography, and Islamic Writing
The Arabic script is the third most widely used writing system in the world (after Latin and Chinese), employed to write not only Arabic but also Persian, Urdu, Pashto, Ottoman Turkish, Malay (Jawi), Swahili (historicall
ZG_1_03 — Egyptian Hieroglyphics — Sacred Writing and Decipherment
Egyptian hieroglyphics (mdw nṯr, "god's words") constitute one of the world's oldest writing systems, attested from ~3250–3100 BCE (the Abydos labels and Narmer Palette) through the 4th century CE (the final dated inscri
ZG_1_10 — Quipu — Andean Knotted-String Information Systems
The quipu (Quechua khipu, "knot") is a recording device made of cotton or camelid fiber cords, consisting of a main cord from which hang pendant cords bearing an elaborate system of knots — used across the Andean world f
ZG_1_06 — Undeciphered Scripts — Indus, Rongorongo, Proto-Elamite
Despite two centuries of decipherment successes — from Egyptian hieroglyphics to Linear B to Mayan glyphs — several ancient scripts remain undeciphered, each presenting unique challenges that have resisted sustained scho
ZG_1_00 — Origins Writing Systems: Subfolder Summary
ZG_4_07 — Constructed Languages — Esperanto, Tolkien, and Beyond
Constructed languages (conlangs) are languages deliberately designed by individuals or groups rather than having evolved naturally — they range from international auxiliary languages (IALs) designed to facilitate cross-c
ZG_4_01 — Whistled and Drummed Languages — Long-Range Communication
Whistled and drummed languages are speech surrogates — communication systems that transpose the phonological or tonal structure of a spoken language into a non-vocal acoustic medium (whistling or drumming) capable of car
ZG_4_04 — Rhetoric and Propaganda — The Power of Persuasive Language
Rhetoric — the art of persuasion through language — is one of the oldest disciplines in Western intellectual history, codified by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a systematic teachable art (technē) with principles appli
ZG_4_10 — Code-Switching and Multilingual Discourse
Code-switching is the practice of alternating between two or more languages (or language varieties) within a single conversation, sentence, or even a single word — a phenomenon observed wherever multilingual speakers int
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