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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.
3,271 results for "ion channels" — page 8 of 164
ZH_3_07 — Celestial Navigation in the Pacific: Micronesian Stick Charts
The peoples of Micronesia — particularly the Marshall Islands and the Caroline Islands — developed some of the most sophisticated non-instrument navigation systems in human history. While Polynesian navigation (covered i
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_18 — Polynesian Star Navigation and Wayfinding
Polynesian star navigation is the non-instrument celestial wayfinding system that enabled the colonization of the Polynesian Triangle — the vast oceanic region bounded by Hawaiʻi, Rapa Nui (Easter Island), and Aotearoa (
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_10 — Naked-Eye Observational Limits: Precision, Techniques, and Ancient Achievement
For all but the last ~400 years of human history, every astronomical observation was made with the unaided eye. Understanding the limits and capabilities of naked-eye observation is therefore essential for evaluating anc
ZH_5_22 — Indian Astronomical Traditions: From Vedanga Jyotisha to the Kerala School
Indian astronomical traditions represent one of the longest continuous programs of celestial observation and mathematical modeling in human history, spanning from Vedic-period naked-eye observations (c. 1500–500 BCE) thr
ZH_5_14 — Dark Sky Preservation: Light Pollution and Heritage Night Skies
Light pollution — the excessive, misdirected, or obtrusive artificial light that brightens the night sky — has transformed humanity's relationship with the stars more profoundly than any development since the invention o
ZH_2_17 — Islamic Golden Age Astronomy: Observation, Innovation, and the Preservation of Knowledge
Islamic astronomy — the astronomical tradition developed in the Islamic world from the 8th through the 15th centuries CE — represents one of the most productive and consequential scientific enterprises in human history,
ZH_2_11 — Southeast Asian Astronomy: Thai, Burmese, Khmer, and Indonesian Traditions
The astronomical traditions of Southeast Asia — Thailand (Siam), Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia (Khmer), Java, Bali, and the wider Malay-Indonesian archipelago — represent a distinctive synthesis of Indian, indigenous, and (i
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_02 — Indian Astronomical Traditions: Aryabhata to Jantar Mantar
Indian astronomy (Jyotish Shastra) constitutes one of the most mathematically sophisticated astronomical traditions of the pre-modern world, spanning from the Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE) through the classical siddhānt
ZH_2_16 — Islamic Astronomical Tables (Zīj): Precision Observation and Computational Tradition from Baghdad to Samarkand
The zīj (Arabic: زيج, plural zījāt) is the Islamic astronomical handbook tradition — comprehensive sets of numerical tables and computational instructions enabling astronomers to calculate the positions of the Sun, Moon,
ZH_1_16 — The Antikythera Mechanism and Greek Astronomical Devices: Precision Gearing in the Ancient World
The Antikythera mechanism — recovered from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera in 1901 — is the most sophisticated scientific instrument known from the ancient world, a hand-cranked astronomical cal
ZH_1_06 — Zodiac Origins: Babylonian MUL.APIN to Greek Transmission
The zodiac — the division of the ecliptic (the apparent annual path of the Sun against the background stars) into 12 equal 30° segments, each named after a constellation — is a Babylonian invention that became the founda
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_11 — Copernicus, Kepler, and the Astronomical Revolution
The astronomical revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries — transforming humanity's understanding of its place in the cosmos from an Earth-centered (geocentric) to a Sun-centered (heliocentric) model — is one of the mos
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
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