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.

193 results for "sacred spring" — page 9 of 10

ZE_2_11 Verified Ethics & Applied Philosophy

ZE_2_11 — Liminality, Ritual Transition, and Ethics of Transformation

Liminality — from the Latin limen (threshold) — describes the ambiguous middle phase of ritual transitions where participants are "betwixt and between" established social categories. Arnold van Gennep (Les rites de passa

liminality Victor Turner van Gennep rites of passage communitas liminal space
N_1_16 Credible Secret Societies

N_1_16 — Ancient Mystery Schools — Comparative Survey

The mystery schools (Greek: mysteria, from myein — "to close" or "to shut," referring to closed lips and closed eyes of initiates) constituted the esoteric religious tradition of the ancient Mediterranean world for over

mystery school Eleusinian Mysteries Orphism Mithraic mysteries Egyptian mysteries Isis cult
N_1_03 Secret Societies

N_1_03 — Pythagorean Brotherhood as Proto-Secret Society

Pythagoras of Samos (~570-495 BCE) was a Greek philosopher, mathematician, and mystic who founded a communal religious-philosophical society in the Greek colony of Croton (modern Calabria, southern Italy) around 530 BCE.

Pythagoras Pythagorean brotherhood Croton Music of the Spheres tetractys akousmatikoi
N_5_04 Verified Secret Societies

N_5_04 — Secret Initiatory Traditions in Indigenous America

The indigenous peoples of the Americas developed an extraordinary diversity of secret initiatory societies — ceremonial organizations with restricted membership, graded initiation, guarded esoteric knowledge, and defined

kiva Midewiwin Grand Medicine Lodge Hopi Pueblo kachina
N_3_05 Secret Societies

N_3_05 — Gurdjieff, the Fourth Way, and Esoteric Schools

George Ivanovich Gurdjieff (c. 1866-1949) was one of the most enigmatic and influential spiritual teachers of the 20th century, whose "Fourth Way" system proposed that ordinary human beings live in a state of mechanical

Gurdjieff Fourth Way self-remembering Ouspensky enneagram Beelzebub's Tales
N_4_06 Secret Societies

N_4_06 — African Secret Societies (Poro, Sande, Ogboni, and Initiatory Traditions)

African secret societies — more accurately described as initiatory societies or power associations — are among the most widespread and functionally important social institutions in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in Wes

Poro Sande Ogboni African secret societies initiation societies masquerade
R_5_07 Credible Biology & Evolution

R_5_07 — Ethnobotany: Plants, People, and Traditional Knowledge

Ethnobotany — the study of the relationships between plants and people across cultures and throughout history — documents how human societies have used plants for food, medicine, shelter, textiles, tools, dyes, poisons,

ethnobotany traditional plant knowledge medicinal plants indigenous knowledge Schultes economic botany
F_2_07 Verified Lost Connections

F_2_07 — Salt Trade and Ancient Economies

Salt — sodium chloride (NaCl) — was arguably the most economically important commodity in the ancient and medieval world, rivaling gold and silver in its capacity to generate wealth, shape trade routes, and determine the

salt salt trade Hallstatt Wieliczka Saharan salt trade Taghaza
F_4_23 Credible Lost Connections

F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity

Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,

salt-trade saharan-trade roman-salt salary-etymology salt-roads timbuktu
F_3_15 Credible Lost Connections

F_3_15 — Shared Pyramid Traditions: Egypt, Mesoamerica, China, Sudan

Pyramidal structures — monumental constructions with broad bases tapering to a point or platform at the top — were built independently by civilizations across the globe: the Egyptian pyramids (c. 2686–1550 BCE, from the

pyramid stepped pyramid Giza Teotihuacan Maya Nubian pyramid
A_4_15 Foundations

A_4_15 — Guru Granth Sahib as Primary Sacred Text

The Guru Granth Sahib (ਗੁਰੂ ਗ੍ਰੰਥ ਸਾਹਿਬ) is the central sacred scripture and living spiritual authority ("eternal Guru") of Sikhism, compiled by the fifth Guru, Arjan Dev, in 1604 CE (the Adi Granth) and finalized by the

Guru Granth Sahib Adi Granth Sikhism Guru Nanak Guru Arjan Guru Gobind Singh
A_4_35 Credible Foundations

A_4_35 — Chinese Millenarian Sacred Texts

Chinese millenarian sacred texts constitute a vast, largely unstudied corpus of sectarian religious literature produced over more than a thousand years (Song dynasty through the 20th century) by heterodox religious movem

China millenarianism White Lotus Maitreya baojuan precious scrolls
A_3_18 Credible Foundations

A_3_18 — Etruscan Sacred Texts: The Liber Linteus and Ritual Tradition

The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna/Rasna) were the dominant civilization of pre-Roman Italy (c. 900–100 BCE), controlling much of central Italy from their homeland in Etruria (modern Tuscany, Umbria, and northern Lazio).

Etruscan Liber Linteus Zagreb mummy Tabula Capuana haruspicy liver divination
U_5_29 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_29 — Ancient Brewing: Beer, Civilization, and Sacred Fermentation

Beer may be older than bread. Archaeological evidence from Raqefet Cave (Israel, c. 13,000 BCE) and Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, c. 10,000 BCE) demonstrates that cereal fermentation predated or co-evolved with agriculture, supp

beer brewing fermentation ancient beverages sumer mesopotamia
U_4_00 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_00 — Sacred Symbolic Ritual: Subfolder Summary

Verified

INTERDOC_75 — Sacred Acoustics and Cymatic Resonance as Consciousness Architecture

[KEY FINDING] Sound is a structural physical force. Cymatics proves that vibration organizes chaotic matter into precise geometric configurations. The acoustic engineering of ancient ritual spaces (often tuned to 111 Hz)

432 hz isochronic tones Ernst Chladni cymatics megalithic acoustics resonance
W_1_25 Verified World Civilizations

W_1_25 — Dilmun: Sacred Land of the Persian Gulf

Dilmun (Sumerian: NI.TUK.KI; also spelled Telmun) was an ancient civilization and trading polity centered on present-day Bahrain, with extensions to Failaka Island (Kuwait), the eastern Arabian coastal region, and possib

Dilmun Bahrain Failaka Qal'at al-Bahrain Mesopotamia Indus Valley
C_5_38 Credible Global Traditions

C_5_38 — Sky Burial: Excarnation, Ritual Exposure, and the Sacred Treatment of the Dead

Sky burial (jhator in Tibetan, meaning "giving alms to the birds") is a funerary practice in which the body of the deceased is placed on an elevated, open-air site and exposed to the elements and to carrion birds — prima

sky burial jhator excarnation Tibetan Buddhism Zoroastrianism dakhma
C_5_34 Verified Global Traditions

C_5_34 — Greek Religion: Gods, Ritual, and the Sacred in Ancient Greece

Greek religion was not a unified creed but a diverse ecology of practices, beliefs, and institutions that varied by polis, period, and social context. At its core was polytheistic ritual practice — animal sacrifice, liba

greek religion olympian gods mystery cults eleusinian mysteries oracle delphi
Credible

INTERDOC_27 — The Serpent Symbol: Global Inversion from Sacred to Evil

[KEY FINDING] The serpent is the single most universal sacred symbol in human culture. Every inhabited continent produced independent serpent veneration: Wadjet and Uraeus (Egypt — the cobra on the pharaoh's crown repres

serpent symbolism snake Ouroboros kundalini caduceus Quetzalcoatl