RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

395 results for "dead sea scrolls" — page 9 of 20

ZH_2_18 Credible Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_18 — Angkor Wat Astronomical Alignments

Angkor Wat — the vast Hindu-Buddhist temple complex in Siem Reap, Cambodia, built by King Suryavarman II between approximately 1113 and 1150 CE — is not only the largest religious monument on Earth (covering 162.6 hectar

Angkor Wat astronomical alignment equinox solstice Khmer Suryavarman II
ZH_2_12 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_12 — Agricultural Astronomy: Star-Based Planting and Harvest Calendars

Before modern calendars, weather services, and agricultural extension offices, farming communities worldwide used stellar observations to time their agricultural activities — planting, irrigation, harvesting, and animal

agricultural astronomy heliacal rising Pleiades Sirius planting calendar harvest
C_1_15 Global Traditions

C_1_15 — Oral Tradition Fidelity: How Accurately Do Myths Preserve Historical Facts?

Oral traditions have long been treated with skepticism by historians trained in text-based source criticism, yet mounting evidence suggests that under certain conditions, oral narratives can preserve accurate information

oral tradition memory fidelity Aboriginal Australian sea-level rise folklore phylogenetics Vansina
C_1_21 Credible Global Traditions

C_1_21 — Arctic and Inuit Mythology: Comprehensive Survey

Arctic and Inuit mythology encompasses the spiritual traditions of the Inuit, Yupik, Iñupiat, Aleut (Unangax̂), and related circumpolar peoples across a vast territory stretching from Greenland through Arctic Canada, Ala

Inuit Arctic Sedna Sila Angakuq shamanism
C_4_05 Global Traditions

C_4_05 — Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis

This document examines Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include The Deep Time Record, Diversity — Not "A Culture" but a Continent o

Aboriginal Australian Dreamtime Dreaming Tjukurpa Jukurrpa Altjeringa
C_4_07 Global Traditions

C_4_07 — Inuit and Arctic Cosmology — Sedna, Shamanic Flight, and Survival Knowledge

The Inuit, Yupik, and Aleut peoples of the Arctic — collectively known as Eskimo-Aleut or Inuit-Yupik-Unangan — developed one of humanity's most extraordinary spiritual-ecological systems in the world's harshest habitabl

Inuit Arctic Sedna Sila angakkuq shaman
C_5_06 Global Traditions

C_5_06 — Mesopotamian Underworld — Ereshkigal and Kur

The Mesopotamian underworld — known as Kur, Irkalla, or the "Land of No Return" — represents one of humanity's earliest detailed conceptions of an afterlife realm. Unlike the moralized afterlives of later traditions (Egy

Ereshkigal Kur Irkalla Mesopotamian underworld Inanna descent Ishtar descent
C_5_32 Verified Global Traditions

C_5_32 — Flood Myths: Universal Deluge Traditions Across Civilizations

Flood myths appear in over 200 cultures across every inhabited continent, making the "Great Deluge" one of the most universal narrative motifs in human mythology. The oldest written version appears in the Sumerian Eridu

flood myth deluge noah utnapishtim manu deucalion
C_5_03 Global Traditions

C_5_03 — Indigenous Knowledge Systems

Indigenous knowledge systems represent the longest-running experiments in human survival — the Australian Aboriginal peoples have maintained continuous cultural practice for 65,000+ years, making theirs the oldest living

indigenous knowledge traditional ecological knowledge TEK Aboriginal Dreamtime oral tradition songlines
C_5_35 Credible Global Traditions

C_5_35 — Tibetan Buddhism: Vajrayana Tradition, Tantra, and Contemplative Science

Tibetan Buddhism — the Vajrayana ("Diamond Vehicle") tradition that developed in Tibet from the 7th century CE onward — represents one of the most elaborate systems of contemplative practice, philosophical analysis, and

Tibetan Buddhism Vajrayana tantra Dalai Lama Padmasambhava tulku
C_3_01 Global Traditions

C_3_01 — Global Flood Stories

Over 500 independent flood traditions exist worldwide, spanning Mesopotamian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Greek, Aboriginal, Mesoamerican, and dozens of other cultures. The oldest written accounts — the Sumerian Eridu Gene

flood deluge Gilgamesh Ziusudra Atra-Hasis Noah
C_3_08 Global Traditions

C_3_08 — Death Rituals, Funerary Architecture, and the Technology of Dying

How a culture treats its dead reveals its deepest beliefs about what a human being is and what (if anything) lies beyond death. From the earliest known intentional burial (~100,000 BCE, Qafzeh Cave, Israel — ochre-staine

death ritual funeral funerary burial cremation mummification
ZF_2_13 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_13 — Marine Invertebrate Diversity — Cnidarians, Echinoderms, Mollusks

Marine invertebrates — animals without backbones — constitute the vast majority of animal diversity in the ocean: of ~230,000 described marine animal species, approximately 195,000 (85%) are invertebrates, spanning more

marine invertebrate cnidaria echinoderm mollusk coral jellyfish
ZF_2_15 Credible Oceanography

ZF_2_15 — Jellyfish Ecology: Blooms, Climate Change, and Gelatinous Dominance

Jellyfish (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa, Cubozoa, Hydrozoa, and the distantly related Ctenophora) are among the oldest and most ecologically significant animals in the ocean — with a fossil record extending over 500 million years

jellyfish cnidaria scyphozoa jellyfish bloom gelatinous zooplankton Aurelia aurita
ZF_2_19 Verified Oceanography

ZF_2_19 — Marine Bioluminescence: Light in the Deep Ocean

Bioluminescence — the production and emission of light by living organisms through chemical reactions — is the most widespread form of communication in the ocean and arguably the most common visible phenomenon on Earth,

bioluminescence deep-sea-light luciferin luciferase counterillumination lure-predation
ZF_2_03 Oceanography

ZF_2_03 — Marine Migration Patterns and Cetacean Intelligence

Marine animals execute some of the most extraordinary navigational feats in biology — humpback whales migrating 8,000+ km between polar feeding grounds and tropical breeding waters, sea turtles returning to their natal b

whale migration sea turtle navigation European eel salmon homing cetacean intelligence humpback whale song
ZF_3_12 Verified Oceanography

ZF_3_12 — Submarines, Submersibles, and the History of Ocean Exploration

The history of ocean exploration technology spans from the earliest diving bells (Alexander the Great's legendary glass barrel, ~332 BCE; Halley's practical diving bell, 1690) to full-ocean-depth human-occupied vehicles

submarine submersible bathysphere bathyscaphe Trieste Alvin
ZF_3_08 Verified Oceanography

ZF_3_08 — Sunda Shelf and Southeast Asian Submerged Landscapes

The Sunda Shelf (or Sundaland) is one of Earth's largest continental shelves — an area of ~1.8 million km² (larger than the Indian subcontinent) that connects the islands of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, and Bali to peninsular

Sunda Shelf Sundaland Southeast Asia submerged landscape Wallace Line Huxley Line
ZF_3_05 Oceanography

ZF_3_05 — Ancient Maritime Navigation and Wayfinding

Long before the compass, sextant, or chronometer, ancient maritime cultures navigated thousands of miles of open ocean using sophisticated systems of environmental observation — star paths, ocean swell patterns, wind shi

Polynesian wayfinding star compass wave piloting Marshall Islands stick chart celestial navigation dead reckoning
ZF_3_06 Oceanography

ZF_3_06 — Polynesian and Indigenous Ocean Knowledge

Indigenous and Pacific Islander communities have accumulated millennia of empirical ocean knowledge — encompassing navigation, marine ecology, fisheries management, weather prediction, tidal patterns, and ocean-land rela

traditional ecological knowledge TEK Polynesian voyaging Mau Piailug Hokule'a Polynesian Voyaging Society