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.
2,448 results for "Ur dragon" — page 80 of 123
T_5_01 — Sports Psychology and Performance
Sports psychology investigates the psychological factors that influence athletic performance, exercise behavior, and physical activity — applying principles from cognitive, social, and clinical psychology to optimize hum
D_2_20 — Central Asian Archaeological Sites: Merv, Afrasiab, and Ai-Khanoum
Central Asia — the vast region spanning modern Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and northern Afghanistan — was one of the most intensely urbanized and culturally productive regions of the ancient world, despite its
D_2_16 — Tartessos & Iberian Peninsula Civilizations
Tartessos was a semi-legendary Bronze Age and Iron Age civilization centered in the lower Guadalquivir River valley of southwestern Iberia (modern Andalusia and southern Portugal), flourishing approximately 1100–550 BCE.
D_2_13 — Palmyra: Crossroads of Civilizations
Palmyra (ancient Tadmor; Arabic: Tadmur) — an oasis city in the Syrian desert approximately 215 km northeast of Damascus — rose to extraordinary prominence between the first and third centuries CE as a caravan trade hub
D_2_08 — Mycenae: Lion Gate, Shaft Graves, and Bronze Age Greek Power
Mycenae, located in the northeastern Peloponnese, was the dominant political and cultural center of Late Bronze Age Greece (~1600–1100 BCE) and gave its name to the entire Mycenaean civilization. Heinrich Schliemann's 18
D_2_05 — Troy (Hisarlik): Schliemann, Stratigraphy, and the Birth of Field Archaeology
Troy (modern Hisarlik, northwestern Turkey) is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, identified with the legendary city of Homer's Iliad. The mound contains at least nine major stratigraphic layers sp
D_2_01 — Maltese Temple Builders and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum
The Maltese Temple Period (~3600–2500 BCE) produced the oldest free-standing structures on Earth — predating the Egyptian pyramids by ~1,000 years and Stonehenge by ~1,500 years. The tiny Maltese islands (316 km² total —
D_2_15 — Hattusa: Hittite Capital and Treaty Archives
Hattusa (modern Boğazköy/Boğazkale, approximately 150 km east of Ankara in north-central Turkey) — the capital of the Hittite Empire from approximately 1650 to 1180 BCE — was one of the greatest cities of the Late Bronze
D_1_04 — Complete Pyramid Catalog: Every Known Pyramid on Earth
This document examines Complete Pyramid Catalog: Every Known Pyramid on Earth, a topic within the Sites and Artifacts research area. Key areas of investigation include Egypt — 138+ Confirmed Pyramids, Sudan (Nubia/Kush)
D_1_12 — Chichen Itza — Calendrical Pyramid and Sacred Cenote
Chichen Itza, located in the northern limestone lowlands of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, was one of the largest and most powerful Maya cities during the Terminal Classic and Early Postclassic periods (c. 750–1250 CE).
D_1_23 — Carnac Stone Alignments: Europe's Largest Megalithic Complex
The Carnac stone alignments — located near the town of Carnac in southern Brittany, France — constitute the largest collection of megalithic standing stones in the world. Over 3,000 menhirs (upright stones) are arranged
D_1_16 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar Reliefs: Iconographic Analysis
The monumental T-shaped limestone pillars of Göbekli Tepe (southeastern Turkey, c. 9600–8000 BCE) bear the world's oldest known examples of monumental relief sculpture — an extraordinary corpus of carved imagery that pro
D_1_05 — Stonehenge and the British Megalithic Complex
Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, is Britain's most iconic prehistoric monument, constructed in multiple phases between approximately 3100 and 1500 BCE — a span of over 1,600 years. The site features massive sars
D_1_07 — Teotihuacan — City of the Gods
Teotihuacan — the name itself meaning "the place where gods were born" in Nahuatl, given by the Aztecs who found the city already in ruins — was one of the largest cities in the ancient world, reaching a peak population
D_1_02 — Pyramids Worldwide
Pyramidal structures appear on every inhabited continent — Egypt, Mesoamerica, China, Sudan, Indonesia, and beyond. The Great Pyramid of Giza (2560 BCE) remains the most precisely engineered ancient structure known, with
D_1_11 — Machu Picchu — Royal Estate of Pachacuti
Machu Picchu, located at 2,430 m asl on a narrow ridge between the peaks of Machu Picchu and Huayna Picchu in Peru's Vilcanota/Urubamba Valley, is the best-preserved Inca settlement and one of the most significant archae
D_5_23 — Chaco Canyon: Ancestral Puebloan Architecture and Astronomical Alignment
Chaco Canyon in northwestern New Mexico was the ceremonial, administrative, and astronomical center of the Ancestral Puebloan world from approximately 850 to 1150 CE. The canyon contains 12 "great houses" — massive multi
D_5_08 — Archaeoastronomy Synthesis
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past peoples understood and used celestial phenomena — reveals a depth and sophistication of ancient astronomical knowledge that consistently challenges conventional timelines of scien
D_5_06 — Fractals and Scale Invariance
Fractals — shapes and patterns that repeat at every scale of magnification — were formalized by Benoît Mandelbrot in The Fractal Geometry of Nature (1982) as a new mathematical language for describing the IRREGULAR forms
D_5_25 — Sacred Mountains: Axis Mundi and Global Mountain Veneration
Mountains occupy a uniquely sacred position in virtually every culture on Earth — serving as the dwelling place of gods, the point where heaven and earth meet, the axis around which the cosmos rotates, and the place wher
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