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.
2,379 results for "Ark of the Covenant" — page 70 of 119
ZH_4_04 — Dogon Astronomy: Sirius B Debate and Modern Assessment
The Dogon are a West African people living on the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali, known for a complex cosmological system documented by the French anthropologist Marcel Griaule in a series of publications beginning in 194
ZH_4_13 — African Stellar Calendars: Borana, Mursi, Tswana
African stellar calendars represent some of the most sophisticated naked-eye observational systems in the ethnographic record, yet remain among the least studied in archaeoastronomy — a gap that reflects colonial biases
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_09 — Astronomical Petroglyphs and Rock Art
Humans have carved, painted, and pecked celestial imagery into rock surfaces for at least 10,000 years — and possibly far longer. Astronomical petroglyphs and pictographs are found on every inhabited continent: images of
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_19 — Inca Astronomy and Ceque System
Inca astronomy represents one of the most sophisticated indigenous astronomical traditions of the Americas, deeply embedded in the spatial, ritual, and agricultural organization of the Tawantinsuyu (Inca Empire, ~1438–15
ZH_3_10 — North American Mound Builders and Celestial Alignments
The mound-building cultures of eastern North America — spanning from Poverty Point (~1700 BCE) through the Adena (~800–100 BCE), Hopewell (~100 BCE–500 CE), Fort Ancient (~1000–1650 CE), and Mississippian (~800–1500 CE)
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_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_15 — Astronomical Symbolism: Stars, Crescents, and Suns in Heraldry and Currency
Astronomical symbols — stars, crescents, and suns — are among the most universal and enduring elements in human visual culture, appearing on the flags of over 70 nations, on coinage from the earliest electrum staters of
ZH_5_03 — Modern Archaeoastronomy: GIS, LiDAR, and Digital Methods
Modern archaeoastronomy has been transformed by the adoption of Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR), digital elevation models (DEM), planetarium software (Stellarium, TheSkyX), photo
ZH_2_04 — Cosmic Cycle Doctrines: Great Year, Yuga, Precession Ages
Many civilizations have conceived of cosmic time as cyclical rather than linear — repeating through grand cycles of creation, decline, and renewal that span thousands or millions of years. The most influential of these d
ZH_2_06 — Astronomy in the Rig Veda and Early Indian Texts
The Rig Veda — the oldest of the four Vedas and among the oldest religious texts still in continuous use (~1500–1200 BCE, though dating is debated) — contains hymns, references, and cosmological imagery that reflect the
ZH_2_07 — Persian and Central Asian Astronomical Heritage
The astronomical traditions of Persia (Iran) and Central Asia (modern Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan) produced some of the most important astronomers, observatories, and star catalogs in pre-modern his
ZH_1_15 — Star Catalogs: From Hipparchus to Hipparcos and the Tycho Catalog
A star catalog — a systematic list of stars with their positions, magnitudes, and sometimes colors, proper motions, and spectral types — is the foundational document of observational astronomy. The compilation of ever mo
ZH_1_04 — Nebra Sky Disk: Bronze Age Star Map Analysis
The Nebra sky disk (Himmelsscheibe von Nebra) is a bronze disk approximately 30 cm in diameter, decorated with gold-leaf appliqué representing the sun (or full moon), a crescent moon, stars (including a cluster interpret
ZH_1_18 — Ancient Eclipse Prediction
The ability to predict eclipses — among the most dramatic and terrifying celestial events visible from Earth — represents one of the earliest triumphs of systematic astronomical observation and mathematical reasoning. [K
ZH_1_17 — Precession Discovery Timeline
Axial precession — the 25,772-year wobble of Earth's rotational axis tracing a circle among the stars — causes the vernal equinox point to shift approximately 1° every 71.6 years against the zodiacal background. Hipparch
ZH_1_02 — Egyptian Astronomy: Decans, Star Clocks, Pyramid Orientation
Ancient Egypt developed one of the most sophisticated astronomical traditions of the pre-telescopic world, integrating celestial observation into timekeeping, calendar construction, temple orientation, and funerary cosmo
C_1_11 — Breath, Wind, and Spirit — Pneuma, Prana, Ruach, Qi
Across virtually every human language and culture, the words for breath, wind, and spirit are the same word — or derive from the same root. This is not coincidence but reflects a profound universal insight: breath is the
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